T, " , ? . * 1 ENTER OCCONEECHEE RACE ? Fonty Flock. Spartanburg. I S. C., race driver and present leader in the national champion* ship race for modified stocks, has already filed his entry tor the 200-mile strictly stock car race at Occoneechee Speedway. Hills* boro. N. C.. for Sunday. August 7. Flock Is shown with the 1949 Hudson in which he finished second at Charlotte, but Sunday lie will be driving a 1949 Oldsmobile 88. And so will Red Byron of Atlanta. Byron, Flock Battle Sunday At Hiilsboro ? ?? ? ? ' ? - ? i HTLLSBORO. ? Keel Byron?" and Fonly Flock, two of the nation's out Branding stock x-ar drivers, will re sume thttr battle n xt Sunday aft ernoon, but this time they will go to thfc po?t in Identically -the same type cars to battle it out in 'North Carolina's major strictly stock car race of the year. The 200- mile strictly stock car xpeeM classic, plated for the famous Ooconeechee Speedway, means 200 laps of thrill packed action as some 40 new model automobile go. to the post at 2:45 p m. for this big event. I'repeiations have been made at the famous mile speedway to ac comodate a crowd in excess of 30, 000 people. Time trials will be held Friday and Saturday afternoons with the 40 fastest cars qualifying for the start of the feature Sunday. Byron, winner of the recent 160 mile strictly stock car feature at Daytona Beach, Fla., will again be driving his famous No. 22, which in this case will be Raymond Parks' 1949 Oldsmpblle 88. Flock, who placed second to Jim lloper of Great Bend, Kansas, In the 150-mile strictly stock car race at Charlotte sometime ago in a 1949 Hudson, will be wheeling a 1949 Oldsinobile 88 also, this one being entered by Sam Rice, Martinsville, Va., sportsman and track owner. Rice placed fourth in the Charlotte race and his car came in third at Daytona "Beach with !Frank Mundy, the rhriil show star, at the wheel. Practically every type American made car will be competing in this classic, Including Lineolns, yotVls, SHEARS AGAIN FOR ONLY $1.50 'A l l uy. b Ji*n? niun *ays, "1 have troubled vvitfv toy hrat.^g (or thirty fy?^t*.. !tut. OU.iM N ft changed all that an?l 'l beat ajtain.'' Y<#, you too can hoar agj'ii ?If >'?ti arc hard o? hearing bccauae ,o( ; ?*b*tdrnel*, exeem rat* wax (cciunitnl which *.an a* caus?e >>?*/????<. lingm# ht-ntl noiae*. iOlJkiNE. an A MA* INC.. SCIENTIFIC j i a NOW rcaHy ior vour.uw. The ?Ot RINK h j neechee heads the program for the! year, another modified stock car race will be staged at the tricky quarter mile Bowman Gray stadium ct>ur?e in Winston-Salem Saturday night with Curtis Turner rate'd as a top favorite. Wildlife Commission Adds Stall Biologist Reynold A. 'Fredin, of Ames, Iowa, ' has been employed as an associate I fish biologist in the Flah Division of the North Carolina WlftUlfe Resour ces Commission, according to Clyde P. Patton, Executive Director. Fredin, a native lowan, recel-ved a , B. S. degree in wildlife management at Iowa State College in 1948, and a M.S. degree in fisheries manage ment at the same school in June, 1949. He served in the U. S. Army for . three years including eighteen mon- [ ths in the Pacific Theatre, and was ' discharged as a sergeant. 'Fredin will h?adquarter at Ral i eigh and serve as a technical ad visor of the fertilization and man agement of farm ponds, and work closely with the U. S. Soil Conserva tion Service In this capacity. "He wili also handle correspondence re i gar-ding farm pond management and assist Fish Division Chief Dr. Willis King In the Raleigti office. David C. Thornton, .of Lansing, Michigan, has been employed by the Wildlife Commission as a wildlife specialist to work with the Com mission's Game Division. Thornton is a graduate of Michigan State Col lege with a B. S. degree in wildlife management, and has been employ ed by the Michigan State Co nserva tion Department as a part-time game technician. Thornton will work wirh the Com mission's state-wide wildlife inven tory until the completion of that project next October, and transfer to the Commission's farm game pro gram. ' ? i Milk cows on North Carolina farms produced an estimated 150 mil Hon pounds of milk during May. This Is the highest production rec ord for the month of May and equals the previous record monthly produc tionse t in August, 1944. COMING MOUNTAIN Friday - Saturday. August 5 & 6 AMEBI-CONGO ANIMAL EXPOSITION And Hollywood Monkey Circus NO OTHER SHOW IN THE WORLD LIKE IT Bring the entire family and give them a treat they will remember a lifetime. Odd and Unusual Animals From The 4 Corners Of The Earth WE HAVE NO SIDE SHOWS. NO GAMES OF CHANCE. NO RESERVED SEATS FOR SALE Strictly an educational ?rhlhit. acclaimed by public and press alike, as the finest show of its kind on the road today. Full of thrills. glamour and excitement. Piof. Cogozzo's Monkey Circus DO EVERYTHING BUT TALK. They Are The Season's Laugh Sensation Yon Can't Afford To Miss It Exhibition In large tent directly behind IOY THEATRE. Open 1 p. op. to 11p.m. ? Special Reduced Prices t Adults SOc? Children 25c School Children may obtain FREE coupons at Griffin's Drugstore. ' . ? 1 -a* Farm-Home Week Shows Planned One of the highlights of Farm and Home Week, which is to be held on the State College campus in Hal- 1 eigh August 841, will be a gigantic' land . preparation demonstration during which approximately 30 tractors and tillege machines will be used on a 50-acre field at rhe same time, according to H. M. Ellis, agricultural engineer for the State College Extension Service. Representatives of 10 major farm I machinery manufacturers A'ill de monstrate all of their land prepara tion machinery at 2 p. m. Thursday, August 11, on a field just north of tlie State Fair, grounds. The fieM, which is typical of land that might be prepared for pasture seeding in the Piedmont, will be divided into five-acre plots, Ellis said. Dealers will draw lots for location and each will then put from two to seven trac t6rs and pieces of equipment to work. Equipment to be demonstrated in cludes bottom plows, disc plows, til lers, bush and bog, single and tan dem discs, subsoilers, heavy duty field cultivators and at least one piece of heavy earth-moving equip ment. The demonstration will be con tinuous from 2 to 5 p. m. Farm and Home Week visitors will board buses on the State Col lege campus beginning- at 1 p. m. Buses will operate in shuttle runs all during the demonstration to ac commodate Chose who cannot stay the fall time. Refreshments will be available at the demonstration site. An aVided feature of the event will be drawing for valuable prizes in cluding a plow valuade at $300. Vis. itors will be given numbered tickets as they enter the demonstration a rea. Drawing will take place at a bout 5 o'clock. Ellis hails the demontsration as an unprecedented, opportunity for farmers to compare all the different brands of machinery in actual op eration. For three days prior to the demonstration. Farm and Home Week (visitors will be able to see this arid othef equipment on dis play at the exhibit grounds across the street from the State College li brary. The population of Panama was' 622,567 in 1940. NOTICE or DISSOLUTION Of Notice is hereby given that the partnership of A. H. Patterson and C. E. War lick, operating as A- H. Pat terson Agency has heretofore been dissolved and that A. H. Patterson is no longer connected with said agen cy or has any interest in same and that the name has been changed to C. B. WAiRLICK INSURANCE AGENCY. This the 28th day of July, 1949. A. H. PATTERSON AGENCY by: A, H. Patterson, and C. E. Warlick J-29 ? a-19?D | ^tuiuid CAPUDINE Ar HEADACHE fVasting ! Vm Mlf ?? 4(ra?l?* . wmm& \ m I : WUEN YOU TRIP ON JUNIOR'S SKATE AND NEARIY LOSE . YOUR UPPER PLATE. For the taate thrill of a life- ? time. For beverage' enjoyment you've never known before, reach for energising CHEER WINE! C.heeruine i? in tune uith the American taste Keep a supply at home. Buy a 6-bottle carton or . a case today ! ON ALL OCCas,on. cHEERWINE:IS