I c' 'w'i' * ' i : I MBowa' n'. ' > I Your Best Advertising ^BK Medium I Boy Scout 1 I Gathers St< i A Kickoff M=^-Ihc?Boy Scout finance drive I currently being conducted in Warrenton and Warren County j H got a big boost on Tuesday morning as Warrenton volunteer workers met at Hotel Warren for the annual "Kickoff Breakfast." Some 35 Warrenton citizens >ere present at the breakfast, J during which time a talk on I scouting was heard by the L JAMES B. SHEA, JR. Shea To Speak At Meeting Of Woman's Club I James B. Shea, Jr., executive vice-president of Research Triangle Park in Raleigh, will be the guest speaker at the Warrent on Woman's Club meeting at Hotel Warren on October at 7:00 p. m. Shea is a member of the Ohio State Bar Association, the Association of Iron and Steel Engineers and of the American Indrustrial Development Council. He has been associated with the Research Triangle Park since 1959 and lives with his family in Raleigh. Allen Fune Held Here Funeral services for George Garland Allen, 86, of New York City and Scarsdale, N. Y., were held at Wesley Memorial Methodist Church at Warrenton on Thursday at 12 o'clock, with interment in Fairview Cemetery. A prior service was held in Christ's Church, Part Aevnue, ' ip Mmir VnrV at If) a. m. Wednesday. The service here was in charge of the Rev. Troy J. Barrett, pastor of Wesley f* Memorial Church. He was assisted by Dr. Cecil Robbins, president of Louisburg College, and the Rev. L. C. I Vereen, former pastor of the Warrenton Church, and the [ Rev. Wesley Aiken, chaplain of Duke Hospital, Durham. I Mr. Allen, a charter memI her and chairman of the I board of the Duke EndowI ment. died at his Scarsdale II home Monday. I Associated with the Duke interests since 1695, Allen forK merly served both as president I and chairman of the board of I Duke Power Co. i. Named one of the original trustees of The Duke Endowment upon its establishment in F 1924, Allen in 1925 succeeded \ the late James B. Duke, principal benefactor of Duke University, as chairman of the ? board. . . Allen also was a member of jh the hoard of trustees of Dnke ! iu University from i32t to UN I I: and had aerved on tta exeeu- i I } tlve committee and as chair? f* 1 ? Aa i * ? Lufi ^ la a ^ m t mis of its DUiiding committee, i | Both the univ?r?ity*a claaaroamI adminhtration building, com- 1 ipteted in 1884, and the prin- i 1?(N power plant of Duke t PP?wei Co., which began open- i Me in 1867, are named k i of jkBM* wo aeatn, Dr. Deryi Hirt, i " I Subscription Price $3.00 Fund Drive ;am With Breakfast fliwiip ?nd pinna jriting townspeople were discussed. Warrenton Drive Chairman C. P. Gaston, who presided over the meeting, said that he believed that the breakfast was a complete success and that local workers would prob-| ably finish the drive here this week. Bill Church, District Executive from Henderson, said yesterday that he was pleased with the manner in which the luna arlve was being carried. out and expressed his appreciation to the workers in Warren County who are working simultaneously with fund raisers in 85 other Tar Heel communities in an effort to reach a goal of $220,800 for the Boy Scout movement. * A pre-kick-off meeting was held at Hotel Warren on Friday night when the need for century member was stressed. A century member is one s who donates $100 or more for a membership and who in return receives a certificate for his interest in the work. General Claude T. Bowers, long interested in Boy Scout work, presided over the meeting, attended by a score of local citizens. He presented visiting Scout leaders and introduced Mill Henderson, of the Department of Conservation and Development, who was the principal speaker. Henderson, Century Club chnirmnn for fVin PniinnJI K*4a/_ 1 uiiuiuiuu nn?em;?v^i * : j&Ct&fTJW&ScfBlmMKi TRAFFIC BEGAN FLOWING Traffic T RALEIGH ? An 18-milc lection of Interstate Route 85, lear Henderson, was opened to raffic for the first time Tuesiay, according to an announcenent from the State Highway department. This link of 1-85 stretches rom Henderson, northward jirough Vance and Warren bounties, to a point near the Virginia State line. Built to :he high engineering standards )f the Interstate System, this iection is four-laned, with complete control of access, providn g un-interrupted driving 'rom the Virginia line, southward to Henderson. xavmg cuntracior on mis Jortion of 1-85, one of the ongest projects underway during the current construction Mason, was Nello L. Teer Co., >f Durham. Paving costs on he 18-mile section exceed $3,Warren i Given Pri Charlie Brown, 36-year-old Vegro of Hawtree Township, ras sentenced to one year in iriaon by Judge Julius E. Banet in Warren County Recordsr's Court here on Friday norning. Brown, who was jailed folBwing the death of Mary Alice larnes. 25. of near Wise on >ctober 2, was tried on an asault charge after officers arested him following his conession that he alapped Mary larnes several times the night rior to her death. An ?iitnp?y hyy been orderd in the woman's deathT buF ending the return of the au?pay report, Brown was rought to trial on an assault harge. In another case tried before udge Banzet, William Thomas' laudle, charged with assault rith a deadly weapon and earring a concealed weapon, rew a atx-month suspended antence in one ease and a D-day suspended sentence in lirthelay Calendars 'laced On Sale Jy Rotary Club The annual sale of communy birthday calendars was bean here this Week by the farrenton Rotary Club, whose tembers sell the unique cal-j odars yearly in a door-to-door' nnpaign. The two-week drive, pro-' MdS Of Which Will ?A for lm. rowwli at the Jobs raham High School her* and ir other civic projects, la the cal Rotary Chhl main u?onHPaieing project of the yew. According to Rotarian Brace ell, calenden erffl he on sal*( . IIanion furniture Company >d Boyd-Boyce Motor Com-! lay in Warren too. Whrea of, otariana will also aid In the' impaign by conducting ctleoOut-ct-town persons wishing Harr Copy WARRENTON, C< ACROSS NORTHERN WARREN 'urned Or I 800,000. j Another section of 1-85, be- | tween Durham and Greensboro, I is under contract at the present time. A section between i Efland and Greensboro will be I opened this year and the por- 1 tion from Efland to Durham is slated for traffic next spring. Interstate 85 is one of five ' Interstate routes assigned to s North Carolina. When complet- I ed, it will connect Petersburg, 1 Va., with Montgomery, Ala. It c will serve the State as both 1 an east-west and north-south : artery, entering the State at 1 the Warren County line, cross- I ing over to points near Dur- s I ham. Rurlincrtnn fiw?onoKn?-n x Iand then southward near Lex- t ington, Salisburg, Charlotte, j Gastonia and Kings Mountain, i land entering South Carolina ] I from a point in Cleveland 1 I County. j c Negro Is j son Term g the other. { | He was fined $250 and ordered to pay the costs of court 0 and to pay the medical ex- c penses of Mary Janet Davis, a a Negro girl he wounded on a ^ downtown Warrenton street on ^ ' October 1. In other cases before the ri court, Judge Banzet handed j down the following verdicts: John Robert Taylor, speed- *1 ing, $10 and costs. J Charlie Henry Milam, nonsupport, costs. J Elizabeth Moody West, speeding, $10 and costs. ?Matin?Eugene?Taylor,?no._ operator's license, $25 and T | costs. n Wallace Lee Felts, reckless d driving, $25 and costs. r' Samuel McLain C r e w s, h speeding, $10 and costs. Clarence Ball, reckless driving, $25 and costs. Walter Pierce Hicks, speed- " ing, costs. i lr John Robert Liles, hit and 11 run and reckless driving, one 01 (See COURT, page 12) ? n More Wooly Slugs p Found In Warren i t Three more wooly slugs were discovered this week in Warren County. w The hairy insect, which has T puzzled entomologists and local cl citizens alike, was first discov- g) ered in the county last week k when four were found In the yard of Mrs. J. E. Rooker on s( the Airport Road near bore. Thursday George K Alston, la tenant fanner on the southern ft Warren County farm -owned by SI John Kerr of Warren toe, found three' more. Alston said that Fl wnwwuwu in mi ou m tree and were lint spotted by >1 hi* wife, who killed two end m captnred one to bo stodtod fi heft'" : ^ ?2 2 ZMtatt* the m Untrenity of North Carolina, ?| the iamt *'U* ^ the'rootih jg m M )UNTY OF WARREN, N. COUNTY AS INTERSTATE 85 l Norlina Harvest Festi1 Held Here Or The Harvest Festival, the an I rnal county-wide event sponored by the Warren General lospital Auxiliary, will be leld at the Warrenton Arraorv in next Wednesday, October 9. Tickets for the barbecue and irunswick stew supper may te purchased at the door but HC hww uu stue Wlin Mrs. ] toger Limer in charge of the , icket sale. The supper will be[in at 5 o'clock. Hie barbecue will be prepared by Harvey ling of Areola, and Mr. and ifrs. Richard Davis will pre>are the Brunswick stew out- ( loors at the armory. Sales booths will be open j or business at 3 p. m. but , hoice items will be auctioned ' ly Col. Bob Butler later on. terns for sale in the booths 1 nclude John Graham High ! Ichool novelty items, chances ( n one of Mr. Amos Capps' ;ood country hams, gift items, i ood, plants, etc. t Mrs. Boyd Davis, chairman I f the harvest festival, urges < ounty-wide cooperation in this I nnual appeal. Proceeds will t e used for the benefits of s Varren General Hospital. I Town Water Tank! To Be Cleaned \ Vnd Painted i I The Warrenton Board of ( 'own Commissioners in a short leeting here Wednesday night . evoted largely to matters of iutine gave its approval to , aving the town water tank , leaned and painted. Following a brief discussion, le commissioners authorized le water committee to enter f ito negotiations with tank * lembers over prices and time e f doing the work. Actual fig- ? res were not realized pending J ;ceipt of a contractor's bid. (See TOWN, page 18) r forlina Firemen 0 *o Hold Annual t )ance Thursday ? The annual fireman's dance 1 ill be held in Norlina on next r hursday night with $100 in I tsh prizes scheduled to be ? - - r- *? ' ? * ..... away u> ax lucxy per-' / Hedgepeth's band of liaadar- i m will begin playing for the t rent in the Noriina ciytor- I an at IJt, and hot dogs, tot- t m and aoft drinks wiflba oh da. Jj-.'v A spokesman for tha Norttna be Department, yearly spoo>rs of the event, asked that 1 1 who con Id to tarn oat to ^ eke the de*rtmeanJhly M ind raising drive of the year Adbntssion far the daaee will!* s ane dollar. Them> will belli w *80 first prise, one ?S o jus*: each, be prjorf The Standard Pi 2296 South She) _ _ was opkm:d this week By-Pass yal To 8e i Wednesday Minister Pleased With Attendance At Sunday School The Norlina Baptist Church launched its special attendance drive in Sunday School by having 206 present on last Sunday morning. The camnaien will cnntiniia through the month of October in an effort to have 200 present at Sunday School for four Sundays in a row, the Rev. Malcolm Hutton, pastor, said yesterday. Mr. Hutton said that the ?oal Sunday was reached despite bad weather that prevailed through the weekend "In my ten years as a minster," said the Rev. Mr. Huton, "I have never witnessed a greater exhibition of Christian liscipleship. The people took he bod weather as a challenge o prove their love for God ind His Church. I have never )een more proud of a group of Christians than I was last Sunlay. I am sure the entire campaign will be a success." Meeting To Boost Cub Scout Interest Held At Church A meeting to boost interest n the Cub Scouting program in Varren County was held Tues lay nignt at tne Wesley Menorial Methodist Church here, lud Gaston of Warrenton and lobby Smith of Henderson resided. Following a brief meeting! it which time plans to raise nterest in scouting were disussed, a skit, featuring "Pets in Parade" was given by Irs. lames Short's den. A number of animals and eptiles took part in the skit s well as some of the scouts if the den. Red Lewis' dog was attired n a white T-ahirt with pants, rhile a dog belonging to Fayne Short wore blue plants, '-shirt and red tie. Mack Barett's dog modelled a pink cap, preen pants and sweater, and i. dog belonging to Johnnie lyscue, den chief, spotted a preen hat, blue pants, white hirt and tie. An unattbed unit- to stdn?y Fleming watched the proeedtaga. SVMMKM CHAVGKD The MaphMn nundwr of homaa Scott Oaidoe?~c< Waren ton haa been changed from 46-1 to Mfrl. Gardner aaid that the change i namber* had created a ' \ r rtnttog Company X Iby Street RIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 196 Mayfield 1 At Rurita Night On Boyd Mayfield. Warren' County farmer and a member of the county board of education, was named "Ruritan of the Year" during the annual ladies' night held at the Woman's Clubhouse on Tuesday night. Mayfield, a civic leader in ! his home town of Norlina and active in county affairs, was presented the award by Leigh Traylor, chairman of the award committee and last year's recipient of the same honor. Active in the Farm Bureau I and a successful farmer, Mayfield was praised for his work with the Norlina little league baseball team and with the Norlina midget basketball team, both of which he coached Mayfield is active 'o thi j Norlina High School athletic association and the N. C. State College alumni association. He | is superintendent of the Zion Methodist Church Sunday I School and a teacher in the j Sunday School. He is a past ] president of the Norlina Ruri: tan Club and has been active | in that organization since its ' founding. In presenting the award, j Traylor praised Mayfield as a 1 man interested in his family, j friends and farm. Traylor said I that the honor was well deservI ed and that Mayfield was the | unanimous choice of his com| mittee. | Presiding over the meeting i and serving as toastmaster was , George Read, president of the | Norlina club. Norlina Mayor Graham Grissom gave the inI vocation. Special guests in addition to wives of the Ruritans were r faculty members of the Nor- 1 lina High School. Teachers c were introduced by K. C. Sev- v erance and were welcomed by! 1 Littleton Bo Entomology James William Clark, Jr., of the Littleton Senior 4-H Club was last week declared State 4-H Project winner in Entomology He is the,son of Mr. ! and Mrs. James William Clark | of Vaughan. The Entomology Project is I sponsored by the Hercules | Powder Company, and in recognition for his outstanding record, James will receive an all-expense paid trip to the National 4-H Club Congress to be held in Chicago early in December. James has carried Entomol! ogy as a project for the past five years. His work has ineluded collecting, mounting, preservation and control of insects and conducting life history studies. During this period he has assembled a very extensive insect library. He has rendered great assistance to his neighbors with their insect problems. He has given 99 entomology demonstrations; was declared Northeastern district winner twice and repre- - sented this district in the state contest twice. I James is also an outstand- r ing member in other phases * of 4-H Club work as imH as J entomology. He has served on numerous. club and county committees, held local and *1 county offices. He is now d serving as president of his lo- r cal 4-H club and secretary- fl treasurer of the county 4-H al council. R Tblewt Oaadeot - , tt An candour talent contest P hSf b%TA>?a*ure, lovely, honest and true, le admonished both Ruritans ind guests to be eager to learn ind to be receptive to the iner things of life. n- r ~?i ' lii. uuveiace ciosea Dy asK- -ji ng all present to set a good v sample for others to pattafp J heir lives by. A delicious meal was arranged and served by the Norina Woman's Club. Members if the ladies' night committee rere Clint Hege, the Rev. M. J. Hutton and Erich Hecht. y Is State Winner .. i *V.-V "^v HfjESBl I ^B.^| 4 ^Kv, .'^^H I ' I ^ClAEK, J*. 1| 1II>JII?'?C<1I nnin^ ?1 ^ 5 I Warrenton citizens will be f. rept into the past next Toss- S ly and Wednesday when Uay 1 ew Warren Coonty scenes Imed between 1B85 and ; Am Warren Theatre hsre, | obtnaoiT saw"^rtlrday*?5U m films, shot by prefoaallMB hotographer Lee Waters, in-.ji udc many feet of sCfeMKB rte, and comaMmiiy irious Warren County touKHk* ' s^3t3^K'3j|B