Oooit&Me, tV € ) W MS PAGE 4 lifcFeatara akiJIfjOTTE North Cara Motor Spe»d mm, world famous for the jjfrr of race cars, will eGboj ■h a different sound on Aturday, August 21st. jfiffar ton hours, from 2 p. m. figl midnight, the high bank- M turns will resound with the Bind uf country, western, blue OTMP and folk music. fc jrrv"B£i ftand Ole Opry, w iU be the Wmtet at its kind ever pre- Viliiil. in the Piedmont sec- W> of the country. •Headlining the sftar studded mny of talent w$L be Hank Williams, Jr., son «f the We, great country artirt, and •r of the featyre movie sour Cheating Heart" Will- Bns #rill be playing and Btgiqpr many of songs his MM) made famous plus songs Jut have become standards ■pee -the senior Williams' ▼Country and wastero muaic who will be sharing the Aotlight with will *Le Roy Van Pyke, the lively Miss Marion Worth and Gray. Afor fans of blue-grass music were will be the great Bill yrtinlc plus Garland Shup- # ■ Beating Oil » Dependable Serv. CtTMt 'T'linted Metered /"a\ > Tickets ,» 3ui uer Service niMifi ; S fe H Green Stamps HOKN OIL CO, INC. Phone 634-2380 Ul N. Main St Mocksville ' "TOW FUNERAL HOME *MMnI ScrrtoM It rr Serrtee ► Wmym Ka ton Carl Eaton Hubert Eaton y DIAL 6M-2148 MOCKS VILLE, N. C i See Us For Your Insurance Needs Modksvitte Ins. Agancy, Inc. A ' 4 J. E. DURHAM For Real Estate Needs RUFUS BROCK T Box 514 Mocksville, N. 0. Telephone Office 654 - 5017 Night 495-45767 998-8410 | AA XA jj. A JUJtJUA JOAAAJU JUAJUA AAAAAAAA A TOWNE PHARMACY ''Your Drug Center" PHONE (W4IM i ' 14M W. Innes Si, Salisbury, N. €. OP?N MS DAYS A TEAR LARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE YOU . . . SMALL ENOUGH TO WANT TO Boon B:30-9M p-m. Sundays 1:M I* pjm. r, ■ , ' UPHOLSTERING NEW HOME PURNISRINOS We also carry a complete tine of new furnishing | Let us make your old furniture look new again i for your home, appliances space heaters, etc. Edwards Furniture & Upholstery Co. , Dial 34-2244 Located on Statesvillc Hwy. Rt. 1, Mocksville, N. C. i W^IHMIIimiiPIIII«IIHHqaHUMIIIIII R. J. DAVIS PHONE MS Mill Davis Furiu«« Co. WARM Am PURNACE OIL BURNER AIR-CONDITIONING Phone MElroe* fl-0391 m W, fin Sicaet Mttuy, N. 0. I ll l#W#W W. P. SPEAS, M.D. -OPHTHALMOLOGIST- By*a IsamiMd nd Trtato# . . . CUmms fWji TMT7EB., 9 A.M. - « PJ*. SATURDAY, • A M. - 4 P.M. Officii LOCATED W THE MARTIN RUILDOfG *%m» m-HU m m amw tun rn-sui REGISTERED OPTICIAN . . . WHO MAKES TU IMMPI . . . CONSTANTLY Of ATTENDANCE. Sl^ S# * d * y .. fhtpMd be held cap Sunday, Aw* tZ. at «:W , m. at the HaiL A members and their familk are uofed to attend. Wans at* new underwa, for the iwcad i»»«« 1 to be held «B November 13. ping and the Dixie Blue Grass Buys. An origin*! music form of I the Pindittat section of the V. S. is songs. These will be provided by a highly re garded new-comer, Don Chase. Chase's vocal versatility is re flected by his ability to create a sound similar to Harry Beie fonte's in one song and then emulate the voice of Johnny Mathis in the next. Though the sound at Char lotte Motor Speedway will be different, the fans will be in for a great evening of wholesome lamily entertain ment at the First Annual Southeastern Country Music Festival on Saturday, August 21* Wfottffeif Mews Dairy fanners are busy ma king ensilage and filling ttyar silos lor the nta»r ; if wtator months. The recent dry spell has cut short on the hay crop, a well as late com and other farm produce. C. H. Wetmore, who is wor king in Atlanta, Ga. in the Southern Railway Shops, is spending a week of his va cation here with his Xmubr. * Henderson Fleming, who 'was furloughs* turn his work with the SouOtw* Shqp at Spartanburg, South Cmm lina, several months ago, has recently hmn called hack to work Mr. and Mrs. Howard Painter and children, Jean. Hay, Rickey of Chattanooga, Ten». are spending this week here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. DL Fainter. How ard is also employed by the Southern Railroad at their Chattiuaoogifc shops. C. H. Pone and soo. lopaji truck growers are setting out their lata tomatoes in open hot house* and when nld weather arrives, they will encloae it with plastic and the tomatoes will ripen by arti ficial heat Doug Railey has just finish ed setting out • field of cabhftjK. which should be rea dy for market just before the winter freeze sets in. ¥«, Francis Ward is im proving at Rowan Hospital after • operation performed last week. .'teb fe «WW«ying at home after being seriously injured in an auto accident last June near Martins ville, Va. He was recently discharged from the hospital. Mrs. C. H. Gillean is slow ly improving from ityuries sustained in a fall at the steps at Unity Presbyterian Church several weeks ago. A. G. Etheridge's condition remains about the same at Rowan Hospital. His condi tion u still serious from a stroke about a month ago. Mrs. Donald Gowery «nH children left Thursday for their home by train to Seat tle, Washington after a month visiting here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Bailey. Mrs. Charles Deal has re turned home from Rowan Hospital where she had been a patient for a week. Bowman Gray Stadium Races \ WINSTON- SALEM, N. C.~ _ Richard Petty, winner in two r of his first foui starts since returning to NASCA stock ■ car racing, has filed entry With his hemi-powered Ply . mouth the fifth annual My fi* ftrotfeffs Memorial Grand National race Saturday night at Bowman Gray Stadium- The 1064 national champion from Randieman, North Ca ' rolina, will face a formidable I field that inchicWg ma?y of the-sport's top names. --Jun ior Johnson, Ned Jarrett, Da vid Pearson, Buck Baker, and The Grapd National i race, ' SMlaps around the stadium's tricky aiwner-mile asphalt tracfe wis Qe the main attrac tion Of a program that also ' includes a 50-lap modified and sportsman' race and a 50-lap face for the sleek racing ma chines of the Sports Car Club of Africa (SCCA). The e%ent, called the "My ers Brothers Memorial Stock Car Racing Spectacular," ho nors the memory of the late Billy and* Bobby Myers, who were big names in the sport in th® MMfc Bobby w*» fill ed in a Darlington 50ft crash a stadium race in 1966. Johnson, Jarrett and Dirk Huicharson who is 'battling Jarrett for the lead in ua head the Ford contingent for the Grand National feature. Petty and Pearson are the principal threats for Chrysler, which recently returned to the scene whan NASCAR lif {??' iu p^* nt The Myers Memorial will end the 17th consecutive sea son of NASCAR racing for the stadium, and the 00-lap Gfiwene? ionahfp for that division. Two time winner Carl Burri* en ten the final, with »«-point sr*«s2 BUS.*** The sports car race will end ■ two-day conclave here lor SCCA competitors. They will have practice runs from 3:10 to 7:80 P. M. Friday, and JBOII —rtiw and tranhw n. rw- Practical Bare »■ ij mm TW nI|FM 19 leExpuM ' Salisbury Rowan Tech -1 nical Institute will launch an expanded practical nursing program op September 7th, j President C. Merrill Hamil- J ton announced today. The program in its second mt. will be enlarged to ac , commodate two lull - tame , clauses with a total of 27 Etud j ante. Cabarrus Mfsnocaal Bonpi ' tal in Concord recently join -1 ed with Rowan Technical In stitute in a cooperative pro l gram to help meet the criti cal shortage of trained prac ' tical nurses. At Rowan Memorial Hos pital in Salisbury, the amine will continue with an wrapa ttom 12 to 15 students this fall. The expanded program, ac cording to Mr. Hamilton, will allow students from Rowan and surrounding nfw>ntifs to 1 participate. Two days each week will be spent in classroom vtwk at Rowan Tech wit* Umwc days in clinical and laborato ry instruction at the , t* Tfee course, of 12 months de ration. will Qualify graduates to take the state nursipg board sxaminatkm to ft Ifc- F v I 1 ' «' *** - - - T - - practical nurses Qp iff the Upcast is nfetitnfld, Ows graduate is qmlitwd for em ployment as aa LPN in hos pitals, on private duty, and in nursing homes and pri vate homes. The practical nursing course, designed to fill a gap in the need for persons to care for the «fck and infirmed, is one of 27 offered in the state It is the only one offered in Rowan and neighboring counties. The program is accredited by the North Carolina Board of Nursing, and is carried out under the authority of the State Board of Education. Both loans and grants are available for students if a need is shown. Eight persons will gradu ate next week at the con clusion of the first course. Fifteen persons can be ac cepted for the September class operated with Rowan Memo rial Hospital and another 12 through Cabarrus Memorial Hospital. President Hamilton said that vacancies still exist for the new program, but the dead line for applying is August 27. "The program affords aa excellent opportunity for young and old persons to em bark in nursing careers," Hamilton stated. "It has prov ed its value in the first year and the expanded facilities should make it even more of an asset this year." Statiatics show there is a definite shortage of licensed practical nurses in the pied mont afction of North Caro lina. figures announced by the N. C. Hospital and He-, seiyrch fou/idation show that there will be a need (or ap proximately 300 gu«h nurs es ijj the sUte by the and of next, year. Mrs. Bftiy tyeCrary of Kannapolis, a Watts Hospital graduate and a registered nurse with 10 yeaia experi ence, will serve as sujpervisor coordinator of the program which will enroll new class es next She yiU cop duct tha dfiproonp V(ork and clinical instruction at the Ro wan Memorial Hospital with an Ptto MNtoVrtw teach wqrll tfoe insti tution. "ThJ* WW" ty*. ¥c- Crary "previses ex cellent opportunity for per sons wftnttog nursing careers. It is ayctUejqt lor bpth wo men ana men whose family is ffowa wd Also for young peo ple at least 18 years of age." Information on the program and entrance requirements may be g.toW from Rowan Technical Institute on Inter state 85 at Klumac Road in Salisbury. modified - sportsman qualify ing from 7 to 8 P. M. The racing program will open with the sports car event at 8:15 P.M. followed by the Grand National race and the modi fied-sportsman race in that order. A Ladles Night crowd of 13,969 watched Hank Thom as of Winston-Salem get h& second win oi the season in the Sjft-lap modified and sports man feAure last week. Carl SL.$ lam clinched season titles in the hobby (amateur) and $99 claiming (novice) divisions, respectively, in the final 'BS stadium competition for those iMteafti By Reporter At their regular mar ting on August ninth nearly fifty members of the Senior Citi zens Club signed up far a dsy tour of the mountains by chartered bus. They will car ry along well filled baskets for a picnic lunch. The Rev. Fred Harmon, pas tor of Cleveland and Third Cfeek Presbyterian Church es, brought a most interest ing devotional. His subject was "What is the greatest age?" Starting with child hood, be reviewed several im portant ages leading up to the privileges of the cold en years. The 13th charter of the First Corinthians was read as a basis for his re mark. Beides the Rev. Harmon, Mrs. Harmon and the fallow ing were guests at the meet ing cm Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Wood of Cleve land, Mr. Patterson of Con cent, Miss Emma Grimes of Plant City, Florida, and Mrs. Ma Massey's daughter from Lexington. Two new members were ad ded to our roll Mrs. Maude Nichols, of Woodleaf, and Mrs Kate Jenkins, formerly of Johnson City, Tenn. i A brief sketch of the Life E activities of 33 year old Oscar Booe was read. Mr. i was next aided in our over-eighty members, who we are featuring this year. We understand he will soon be entering a rest home. He will be greatly missed because he has ben a faithful member, especially did he help out in sungiog. Little Miss Wanda Barber, of Pensacola, Florida twelve year-old granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Barber, entertained with an accordi on concert. It was her sec ond performance having play ed for us last summer while visiting here Wanda is quite an accomplished accordianist, having recently won first place at an accordian conven tion. During the social hour, In addition to the usual coffee and cookies, watermelons, do nated by Mr. Dick Watson of Woodleaf, was enjoyed. Over seventy members attended this meeting. Below is a brief sketch of NEW, LO\V PROHLE! • $ I Q 50 *OOI I) tub«lMi bUckwaH, ' pin tax ud Mi* off yom car. 4 1 ' Low prlcm ll iliw I Macmll* tad WMtamlk. New'6s LOOK- I iNew^RIDEI U (fifIQDYEAR'S NEW 1965 i! pATirnti ♦ Naw.widertmdpattarawithcontouredshouldarforbetterhandling 1 o 1 Uft CI VJUuIIIUII . ■ and ooraering; greater stability; moreUractioo; greater reeistaaoe let I :' TOFswwwat „ j " .1: \\ ' * - A > ■ V|J ■ Vil •JiVJf » *r- T * wZ Ik in >■ 1«L J ll|l > i MM model Goodyear eriglnaf-equipmeiit tires! CUSTOM BIACKWAiit wwmw*m 1 \ ■ v CUAIANC1 ~ CUARANCI SUPER-CUSHION ,7.°' i Z.,i — JH—I • Withextra-mileasaTufsvnl a. 4-50 "" l*-** MOslJ 19.70 m wnn extra mileage luisyni 7 j0*14 19.5* 7.60x14 23.00 ' • Blackwalls and whitewallt lMxi4 SMI 1.00*14 5.20 > .»rl«« n r a n r l, A .l e.60,14 13.11 IJOI 14 27M ►; . ( at clearance prices! *jo*is 19.54 *.7o* IB M.oo > 11.43 25J0 7.6o*u »j) 7401 ii 77 M ~ :: Tree Mounting! U J I "No limit" Guarantee! - ; : DAVIE AUTO PARTS COMPANY, INC. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. the life off Oscar Booe. Oscar Dodaaa Booe was bom October 12. 1882 m Nes tor'( three miles from Casta) in Davie County to George Judson and Amanda White Booe. He received his educa tion at White's schoolhouse He came to Coaleemee in IMS and went to work at Br win Mills. In 1865, be married Betty Lakey and to tbem was bom two sons. Wade H. Booe and Paul C. Booe. Betty Booe died in 1912. Mr. Booe re married in 1915 to Nannie Walker and they had three daughters, Mrs. Charles Ho neycutt of Spencer, Mrs. Ja son Bost of Salisbury and Mrs. Dorothy Alexander of Coc*l eemee. Nannie Booe died in March, 1957. In 1918 Mr. Booe went to work for the J. N. Ledford Ccmpany and was employed there until 1988. Since then he has worked as a painter until his retirement. He is remembered by ma- Ny of his friends as a mem ber of a quartet consisting of Charlie Hoover, Jeff Da vis, C. N. "Boss" Spry. He belongs to the P. 0.- S. of A. and the Redmen, and the Senior Citizens Club, and is also a member of the Cooleemee Methodist Church. He has six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren Ephesas fan By MBS. LOIS WILSON Michael Wilson of Red land spent the past week with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. Avery Sink spent Tuesday morning tour ing the mountains. They went to Asheville, Maggie's Valley and Ghost Mountain. They were celebrating their wed ding anniversary. Mrs. Gail Veach and daug hter, Sandra of ElPaso, Tex as, and Mrs. Mary Williams of Fulton Community were guests of Mrs. Ruth Veach on Sunday. Mrs. Ruth Veach and Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Veach at tended the wedding of Miss Stephanie Hopkins and Bennie Dyson on Sunday afternoon in Salisbury. Mrs. Wanda Harris of Win ton-Salem visited her parents Tuesday night The Willing Workers Class of Liberty Church enjoyed a covered dirih supper Situnhy night at the church hut. Mr. and Mi*. Albert Mitch ell and children of Dallas, Texas arrived Sunday for a weeds stay with his parent*, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mitchell Mr. and Mr. Car! Eaton of of Mocksville, and Mr. and Mrs. Emory Frye celebrated their wedding anniversaries on Tuesday night by dining at the K 4 W Cafeteria in W inston-Salem. Mr and Mrs. Lee McDa niel of High Point visited Miss Ella Call one day the past week, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Veach and David of Spencer, visited his mother, Mrs. Ruth Veach, on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Emory Frye visited relatives in High Point on Sunday afternoon. Sunday, August 22 is Home coming Day at Liberty Meth odist Church. Mrs. W. B. May and Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Shepherd at tended the Annual Shepherd Family Picnic which was held at Tangle wood Park on Sat urday. FINAL SUMMER CLEARANCE All Simmer Slits, Sport Coats, Slacks, Bermudas, Swim Tmks, Short Sleeve Sport aid Dress Shirts REDUCED 30% . F-— ——| C/ - / Salisbury, N. C. TffiLSiTSSrV TOOK KMKK USE IT WISELY Business office Dial 284-2000 Davie at Main St Cooleemee, N. C Cooleemee Telephone Co. SIX INCH Air Drilled Web —MODERN All DULL— AIB WELL DULLING CO. It L Advance, N. C. fhne 9W-4141