■ I '■'I SELL YOUR TOBACCO ON HOME* MART Sewer Wilson’s Mi,I Is Connection LawSchool Faculty New Manager Selma’s town board in session last Friday night ordered the en- forecement of the heretofore un enforced ordinance requiring a dwelling to be connected with sewer lines when the lines are within 200 feet of a house. Water and Light Commissioner A. L. Langley and department superintendent W. K. Brown are to begin a town survey to deter mine which dwellings within the city limits are not connected to available sewer lines. They will inform owners of the ordinance and its provisions and request compliance with it. Evacuation of the house may be ordered for non-compliance. County Sanitation Officer Hat cher brought before the board the need of enforcing the ordinance at a' previous board meeting. E. C. .Jernigan and H. V. Gaskill appeared before the board as a committee from the Kiwanis Club to request permission to sponsor a carnival within, the town limits. The Kiwanis Club, they explained, would use the proceeds to help build the proposed Boy Scout hut a club project. A town ordinance forbids carnivals in Selma. Board mfernbers deferred action on this request, because all members were not present. Mayor B. A. Henry presided over the session. Commissioners A. L. Langley, E. V. Deans and Dr. W. H. i,assiter were present. Mr. S. R. Cotton, principal ol the Wilson’s Mills School, relea'C' his faculty list-for the year 191'i 1950: First grade—Mrs. Luther Caj'i) Wilson’s Mills. First grade—>Mrs. Mary , B c hour, Selma, R.F.D. Second grade—-Mrs. Atwood Uzzle, Wilson’s Mills. Third grade—Mrs. S. R. Cotton Wilson’s Mills. Fourth grade—Mrs. Worth Pounds, Clayton, R.F.D. 2. Fourth grade—Mrs. Margaret Greer, Indian Springs, Georgia. Fifth grade—Miss Meta Barnes (Jzzle, Wilson’s Miliy^ Sixth grade—Mr^I. T. Mc- Lamb, Selma. Seventh grade—Mrs. H. E. Mit- ;hiner, Wilson’s Mills., Eighth grade—Mrs. Nelson Wil son, Wilson’s Mills. HIGH SCHOOL French—Mr. S. R. Cotton, Wil son’s Mills. E n g 1 i s h—Mrs. James Uzzle, Wilson’s Mills. Mathematics—Mr. James Uzzle, /Vilson’s Mills. Commercial Department—Mrs. Z. F. Perkinson, Smithfield. History and Science—Mrs. Carl K. Parrish, Wilson’s Mills. Mrs. Saxe Farmer Beddingfield, of Clayton will teach piano music in the school. Shortage Nurses at Vet Selma’s Morning Glory Tree Above—James A. (Jim) Corbett was recently made manager of the Dunn Furniture Co., of Selma, succeeding W. S. Brannan. Mr By W. M. GASKIN Veterans Administtration hospit als, which aim to give disabled veterans a medical ^rvice second to none, are exfiferiencing the ■same shortage of nvrses that is being felt by he^ institutions throughout the coi^^ry. With a few exj^tions, most Veterans AdminlstrTOon hospitals could use more nuifes. There are now .some 12,5.09 n,i»ses on duty in VA hospitals, buf. there has been a shortage sinefe the end of the war. rj,*;; The need for quaked nurses in , ^ especially sh.arp- in,%eterans Ad- | ministration tufehisulosis and neuro-naychiatric ^pspitals, ac cording to Miss J Dorothy V. Wheeler, director ofc;VA’s Nursing Service- ^ Happy Birthday bUCUtitiUlIlg vv. O. J_>tciunciu. xvai , oci v - Corbett has had 22 years expert- VA nurses have fitu profession- ence in the furniture business. al status. Their, pay';'ranges from, just under 33,000 fol%mior grade, to more than $7,000:rfor the assis tant director grad;e. .g^ccording to Miss Wheeler, pi^otions are based on merit. VA'^rses earn a liberal leave allowa^^; of 30 days each year with P^^ PPd are en titled to 18 days of Wck leave with pay, if requested, ^ey are not required to live at th;fe,hospital, if they prefer to live eU^where. Graduate nurses nfdy apply for employment with the.WA at the nearest VA hospital or regional The Grass Was Never Greener By A. H. OLDHAM Akron, Ohio Attorney Middle age was creeping up on me, and my bald spot was getting bigger when I began wondering if ’my dreams of a real vacation would end up like my father-in- law’s. He had worked all his life to retire at 65. Then he -was so worn out that he sat around in a rocking chair for a couple of years, and died without doing any of things he had dreamed of do ing. My wife and I were following the same dismal pattern. We were caught up in a social whirl of en Sept. 10- Sept. 12- Sept. 12- Sept. 12- Sept. 1.3- Sept. 14- Sept. 14- -Evelyn Thornton. -Mrs. Herman Pulley. —T. B. Brown. -Bennie Creech. -W. L. Norton. -Mrs. Wilbert Eason. -Raleigh Griffin. the Smoky Mountain National Park, half way up the mountain from the tourist center of Gatlin burg. At night the campers would gather around fires, exchanging experiences and getting to know each other. Learning to know these new neighbors was just one way the sought a magic escape from rou- Meeting different people intro duced them to many different iSwUghts and ideas. My four youngsters saw a lot of country during our 7,000-mile journey, and I’m surprised at how much they assimilated. Just the dther Sept. 14—Hubert Watkins Sept. 15—Miss Evelyn B. Lynch Sept. 16—Charlie Pearce. Sept. 16—Edward Lee Driver. Sent. 16—Mrs. W. T. Woodard. Sept. 16—John R. Boyd. Sept. 16—Thamer Batten. Sept. 16—^Mrs. Joe Alford. Sept. 16—Mrs. M. E. Draughon. Sept. 16—Mrs. Earl Bass. Sept. 16—E. K. Lamm. Sept. 17—Louise Thornton.- Sept. 17—Mrs. E. V. Darden. Sept. 17—C. V. Mitchener. Sept. 18—Mrs. Oscar D^Johnson Sept. 18—Mrs. Caroline Everitt. Sept. 18—^Eddie Brown. Sept. 18—N. C. Brown. Sept. 19—J. G. Wiggs. The above tree stands in front of the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. V. office, or may write td-dhe Direc-j Smith, on Sumners street in Selma. Over a period of years a morn- tor of Nursing Serv^e ’bf the VAijng glory vine has made its way up into the tree. Early every morn- at Washington. ing large numbers of morning glories 'blossom out in the foliage of Question—My brother does notl^j,gg want to stay in a "Veterans Ad- j __—__ wiu%ave°VhTieives hos-JiQcky Mount Market\Fumiture Store Men pital against medical;advice, will RtKP such actions affect his compen-; onOWS i^teaay tVlSe sation? ' , j Answer No. However, the hos- j Rocky Mount.—Steadily since pital report covering tli^ period he I the opening of the Bright Bel* did remain there may be reviewed j markets, the Rocky Mount To by a VA rating board ; to, deter- bacco Market has been selling a mine whether his disability war rants continuation of hi.' award or a change in the award-., Question—I* my compensation IQ—Mrs Albert W Brown, check from VA suJjiegt^P seizure ,sept. 19-^Mrs. ^ record poundage of leaf for top Belt prices, figures released by the Rocky Mount Tobacco Board of Trade indicate. New Books In County Library By MARY BONEY WILSON The County XJbrary has added to' its not yet overstocked collec-« tion 270 new books. Most of thes9 are badly needed children’s books, which will go, as the expressions says, “Like hot cakes”, and the empty shelves in the children’s room, and on the right hand side of the Bookmobile will make us shake our heads in bewildermnet after all that hard work and say, “Wha’ hoppen?” The Library has some very in-, teresting titles in it addition to the non-fiction list. The Complete Book of Interior Decoration by Deriux is everything its title says. It is thick and loaded with illus trations, some just to drool over, but many to give you ideas. For the amateur artist, or the eager craftsman, there is Cartooning For Fun and Profit by Fisher, and Leathercraft by Johnson. We’ve got two more books on Russia, John Gunther’s Behind The Cur tain, and Handbook For Spies by Alexander Foote, a sort of “con fessions” of an ex-communist spy. The Show of Violence by Frederi? Wertham should interest mystery lovers as well as those interested in psychology and legal problems. If you want to, and don’t know and think you need instruction, we have a book on How To Build A Record Library by Paul Affeld- er. The Question Girls Ask by Helen Welshimer is good refer ence material for the teen-ager who would like to know how to act on her first date, how to be q good hostess, how to act around boys, oh, everything. Headaches by Fabricant is all about what causes that malady and what to do about it. Curtain Going Up! by Glayds. Malvern is a biography of The sales force from B. &. G.lKatharine Cornell which should Furniture Co., in Smithfield, pinetupL-L Level Hardware Co., in Pine who are interested m the stage^ Level and Economy Furniture Co., We have t e new e of Selma, all met in the latter! Story of Life by Ellis Whiting Hold Meeting Here delightfu. Sept. 19 Sept. 19- Sept. 19- Sept. 19 gay -Mrs. --Mrs. C. L. Brown. -Mrs. G. R. Pope. -Mrs. Graham Korne- r“ciSc"|i^^^^^^^ Held for where we were always tired. And when I got around to taking in ventory ol my little kingdom of home and office, I wondered if I had achieved everything that life could bring. Around me I saw men working so hard to give their families every material thing that they had no time to give themselves to their families. I saw my neighbors’ children growing up fast, getting married, moving away, and being killed in the war. So I wanted to hoard my chil dren to my wife and self before we lost them. But there was no time for real companionship in our busy lives. This, I realized, was all wrong. Family companionship is the greatest thing in life, and we were missing out on it. So I decided to take three months off and have a real vacation. We found many reasons why we shouldn t go away, but we soon made up our minds to ignore them, and go any way. To keep my business from blowing up, I got my brother to spend three days a week at the office. “Aha!” you say, “An attorney can do that, but I can’t.” I’m not going to argue your re tort. I’ll merely say you could take three months off if you had a heart attack. It was the oerfect time, and my wife and I knew it would come again. Before long, our youngsters would be old enough to find our vacation just another opportunity to escape from the family circle. Both my wife and I were strong enough to enjoy the trip, which we probably not be able to do when we reached retirement age. So we left home, one fine sun ny morning in June—not to see our fortune but to enjoy the bounty we had never had the time to -P-TiLl": '^sed whh famiir association increased with each curve in the road and each hill we passed. We visited state and national parks from Nova Scotia to North Carolina, living in our trailer beside lakes, streams Sirin the midst of majestic mountains. And every place we dia National Park,, which we had visited. Travel brought the family a wealth of other experiences. The kids caught crabs with a fish head and a landing net. They saw the tide surging into the Bay of Fun- dy, and listened to the never-end ing sawmill roar of the locust at Zaleski Forest. In a bad trailer camp near New York City, our children saw a fat, red-headed fish wife slap and curse at her dirty brood. After this, our youngsters had good rea son to know that their life was better than that of many. So dur ing our three month trip, the chil dren saw far more of fhe unusual md the educational—both good and bad—than they would have in a much longer time at home. My wife and I wanted the trip to slow down the passage of time. I remember when I was a boy that a lazy summer afternoon seemed longer than a month does now, but our trip didn’t slow down time that much. In the lan guage of our six-year-old Bill, the trip went “Zip!” I never did find time to join little Nancy in paint ing the beauty we enjoyed. Nor did I learn to play the Hawaiian guitar. But I did learn one significant lesson, of importance to everyone who has ever thought that some- where the grass was greener. Even not]though I enjoyed every minute of our trip, the vacation was too long—I -was ready to go back to work sooner than I had thought. I had taken the time to see th» grass on the other side of the fence, and I had found that it was not greener than the variety which grows in my own front yard, and the yards of my neigh- bors. I learned that it is a mistake to live in the future and long for re tirement; that the greatest plea sures in life are the things which we enjoy every day. My wife and I have abandbned our old idea of looking ahead to the age of 65. "We want to keep on working, and take more frequent vacations. We aren’t going to wait for retire ment so that we can enjoy life! We have learned that the mild un- for $1,000. Answer—No. Compensation due you is exempt from claims of your creditors and is not liable to at tachments, levy or seizure by or under any legal or equitable pro cess whatever. Question—I am getting a pen-, sion lor a non-service connected! disability. If I get a Civil Service .Mrs. Rose Coats, 23, wife of position, will my pension be taken Golden Coats, Four Oaks, Routejgway. . 3 died in Duke Hospital Monday Answer—Your paymenLs wiu at l a m, from injuries received stop if you receive an annual m- in an auto accident Sunday at 4Uome of $1,000 or more if you are m. store and enjoyed a iunper Tuesday night. The menu consisted of fried J chicken, may peas, lettuce and markei' ^veraged $45” per tomato, ham: sandwiches.- -olives rolls, tea, ice cream and wafers The meal was prepared in th Last week prices^on the Rocky maVlrp.'i''ofcrl S45 '-net hundred pounds as a.gainst tbe .Belt average of $44.28 for the season. The market, operating this season with a fifth set of buyers, is attracting an appreciable share of the total poundage offered for .sale on the Belt. Warehousemen and farmers alike have shown ‘'satisfaction with the trend ol the at Hardy Cross Roads in unmarried or $2,500 or more, it have minor The Veterans Service Office will be glad to assist in the above. Club Supper Was a Sell Out in store on a Hotpoint electric range. After the supper the salesmen heard talks by Johnny Waker, Hotpoint representative from Ral eigh and Hub Brown, manager of Economy Furniture Co. In his talk Mr. Walker brought out that electric ranges and electric re frigerators are lower in price now than they were before the war. Stork Club ». HI. CH. — I*-* _ Harnett County. Mrs. Coats wasjyou are married or the daughter of Willie O. and children. Fannie Hobbs Barber of Clayton, Route 1. Funeral services were held Tuesday at 4 p. m. frorn Berea Presbyterian Church, of which she was a member, by the Rev. W. H. Lancaster, pastor of Smithfield Free Will Baptist Church. Burial was in the church cemetery. Surviving are her husband, her parents; three sisters, Mrs. Glenn Barbour, Clayton, Route 1, Mrs. Kenneth Wilson, barbecue supper sponsored Wendell, Melba Barbour, Balti- ^jub and held in more, Md.; five brothers, E. B., Community building in Pine Four Oaks, Route 2, Thurman “ Pridav night, was a com- Benson, Route 1, Joseph of Four sales. Poundage of leaf offered for sale in Rocky Mount last week reached a high of 1,778,432 on Friday. The quality of the leaf was a little off, however, and the sales paid out $763,272.73 for a $42.92 average. Only small amounts of tobacco remained on the warehouse floors over the week end and holiday. Best money day of the week was Thursday, when 1,673,798 pounds were sold for $767,593.91 averaging $45.86. On Wednesday the Rocky 7 848^76 ' pounfsi Mr. and Mrs. Calvin C. Hallock pounds of . , topped of Lyndonville, Vermont, announ- the^Belt aver^gfby $2 0L ^he|ce the birth of a daughter, Caro- Belt average that day was $43.32;-lyn Mane, on Wednesday, August fhe Rocky Mount average, $45.86. 124. Mrs. Hallock is the former which should be a good prompter for mother when her offspring comes up with the first questions. Journey Into Spring is a new novel by. a .fellqw Yorkshirenvan of Miss Scoffield’s, Winston Clew-^ es about one Godfrey Fletton’s return from the war, full of un-» happiness, wanting to be alone, but finally, after many frustra tions, realising that it is impos sible for him to live apart from the world, creating his own, and being the only person in that world. One Clear Call Upton Sin clair is supposed to be the next to the last of the Lanny Budd novels, but, shoot, history isn’t going to stop for Lanny Budd, and he has to be around ,it seems, to be in on the happenings as usual. Hunter s Horn by Harriette Arnow is an other story set in the hills of old Maureen Daly has Oaks, Route 3, Alger ol Sanford Melvin of Benson; her maternal grandmother, Mrs. Ella Hobbs, Lexington; several uncles and aunts. Dr. and Mrs. J. T. Hughes of Pittsboro, announce the birth of Kentucky, a son, John Thomas Hughes III,'selected her Favorite Stories and August 12th. Mrs. Hughes the for-lppt them in a book for you. I en- mer Miss Elizabeth Disney ofljpyed the one I read very much Baltimore, Md., and Dr. Hughes is j galled The Boy Who Loved Berg- the son of Mrs. J. T. Hughes of pigp by Virginia Oakey which i$ Selma. supposed to be true. I Miss Marie Darden of Kenly. IS UP AND OUT plete sell out. More than 187 plates were ser ved at 75c and $1 each. The total receipts from the supper amount ed to $189. The net profit was estimated at $116. The supper was given for the benefit of the Pine Level Woman’s Club build ing. , Guests at the supper were given Dr. Allen J-.ee recently moved] ^ ghoice of boiled ham or barbe In New Office Roy A. Jones of Norfolk, Va., a former resident and Selma town official, is now able to be up and around after suffering a severe heart attack about year ago, his many friends are glad to learn. SERIOUSLY ILL into his new office next to Wood ard and Creech Drug Co., on Rae- ford street. New equipment has been installed and the office modernized in every way. Two telephone numbers are given lor those desiring to contact Dr. Allen. They are 108 and 175-J. Reservist to Meet All Johnston County Reservest are encouraged to attend the re gular meeting Wednesday, Sep tember 7, at 8 p. m. at the Armory in Smithfield. Pay vouchers and reenlistments are to be taken care of at this time. cue with slaw, pickles, corn bread, loaf bread, tea and several kinds of pie. Serving started at 6:30 p m. and continued until- 8:30 p. m. At 7:30 o’clock the club members saw that there would not be enough lor the large crowd, so they began to prepare additional food. Sayed^\he four children got realjrest and dissatisfaction we have p\eLure out of helping with the experienced often leads toward "^wf weren’t the only ones who trip broadened our tine through inexpensive trav^ We saw thousands of voung and old—tenting by lakes in the Adirondacks and hiking th those will-o’-the-wisps which men have been seeking for thou sands of years and never foimd. One of the main purposes of our trip was to fan or smother this faint inner question mark. The trip ended forever our dissatis and Mrs. Silas Junius of Wilson, announce Funeral Services for Paul E. Whitley Mr. Hooks birth of a son on August 31st at the Carolina Gen eral Hospital, Wilson. Mr. Hooks is a native of Kenly. Paul fJdwin Whitley, 61, farmer of Smithfield, Route 1, died ih Rex Hospital Tuesday morning at uua XVCA. _ - luuiiLc the 8:30 o’clock following a brief ilU Wednesday,'ness. He was the son of Adam J E. J. Sasser is seriously ill at his home on Pollock Street. 3TRAIGHTENER-UPPER HAMILTON REUNION ^4- ill M/Sgt. and Mrs. James W. Pierce of 704 N. Lucille Street Harrison, Ark., announce the birth of a daughter, Marica Dianne, on Thursday, August 25, in a , Harrison Hospital. Mrs. Pierce is the former Miss Lanie Watson of Kenly. Mr. Pierce is also a native of Kenly. '1 Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Narron Kenly announce the birth of J daughter on September 1st Worfdard-Herring Hospital. The annual reunion of the late John Branton and AquiUa Hamil ton will meet the third Sunday in September, at the home of Almon G. Hamilton. Located about . one mile out of Smithfield on the Smithfield-Wilson’s' Mills high way. All relatives and friends are urged to attend bringing well filled baskets. T "'I ' trail They w e r e'faction. We found through travel helnfu^ frienW folks that all of that our little kingdom, small and helptu , meeting I esoecially insignificant as it is, is superior to oaT Smp-ground la iS.e B Pag. Flv.) HARVEST SALE The Pine Level Community Harvest Sale will be held Oct. 7th. Local Club to Honor Selma School Faculty The Selma Kiwanis Club in weekly sunper;.session Thursday night set their annual entertain ment of the school faculty for Thursday night. Seotember 15. On this occasion each year, the I wives of Kiwanians are guests also. W. W. Meece. chairman of the Boy Scout building committee, announced plans for beginning erection of the hut this week. Earlier nlans to begin the hut had been delayed because of Meece’s illness. J .Hayden Wiggs presided over the meeting., Floyd C. Price, Sr., was announced as program chair man for the next meeting. The Philathea Class of the Bap tist Sunday School served the en joyable meal in the "Woman’s Club building. Mr. and Mrs. Otho Batten, Ken ly, Route 2, announce the birth of a daughter, in Woodard-Herring Hospital, Wilson. Whitley and the late Casey Whitley of Srn.ith.field» Route 1. He had been a member of Pisgaji Baptist Church for more than 30 years and was a member of the board of deacons. Funeral services were conduct ed from the church Wednesday at 3 p. m. by the Rev. C. W. Tea gue, pastor of Thanksgiving Bap tist Church, assisted by the Rev. William Poole, pastor of Pisgah Baptist Church. Internaent was in, the church cemetery. Surviving in addition to hi$ father are his wife, the former Mattie Smith, four daughters, Mrs. Jim Murray of California, Mrs. Hobson Cooper of Sanford, Mrs. W. B. Harris of Chapel Hill, Mrs, Albert Williams of Smithfield, Route 1; four brothers, George T. Whitley of Rutherford College and Mr. and Mrs. Willis Fulghum of Kenly, announce the birth of a son, on Tuesday, August 30th in Woodard-Herring Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Batten an nounce the birth of a daughter, Brenda Carol, August 22. state Senator Adam J. Whitley, Jr., Ira C. Whitley, and Jesse H. Whitley of Smithfield, Route 1, two sisters, Mrs. E. B. Hales of Warsaw and Pearl Whitley Clinton; two grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. It’s all in a day’s work for a Navy Bluejacket. A crew member from one of the units of the Sixth Task Fleet lends a little support to the Leaning Tower of Pisa In the course of the Fleet’s visit to the ports of northern Italy. Florence, Pisa and other Italian cities were on the sightseeing agenda as the Task Force brought the Naval ver sion of America to Mediterranean slljjjtes. (Official U.Sl Navy Photograph) New Location for Western Union Here The Western Union Office is now located at Selma Furniture Company. Money orders and Mes sages may be received and sent between the hours of 8;00 a. m. and 5:30 p. m. on week days and 10:45 to 11:00 a. m. .and 1:30 to 2:30 homecoming Homecoming' will be observed at St. Mary’s Free Will Baptist Church Sunday. Dinner will be served on the grounds following the morning service. The church is located north of Kenly in Wil son County. days The increasingly rapid gain in .vu ». .11. -.11111 i n- i-,the number of starlings is the p. m. on Sundays and holi- most serious threat to bird life in North America.