CTHURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1931 VANCE NEWS-LEADER, HEXDersOX, N. C. PAGE SEVEN AYCOCK NEWS 1 By DELIA PUCKETT I Visiting Here Miss Arelle Willis of Clarksville, Va., ferrived Monday June 15, to be the Jioiise guest of Miss Mildred Stewart. . Home From School Misses Mary and Elma Currin,- aaughters of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Cur rin of ne®j Middleburg have returned home from Meredith College to spend .their summer vacation. Miss Mary Currin graduated from Jileredithh College with high honors. Miss Elma Currin will be a Senior at Meredith next term. Visits Here Miss Mabel Patterson of Oxford, N. C. spent last week with Misses Eliza- Jieih Cottrel and Marie Puckett. Visits Parents Mr. and Mi's. A. E. Stewart of Dur ham and M. H. Stewart of Greensboro visited their parents Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Stewart this past week end. Church Calendar—Revival Begins The people of the Carey Com munity are looking forward to the first week in July, when an old friend and pastor. Rev. George Tunstall of High Point, N. 0. will help the pastor cf the church. Rev. John P. Mitchi- ner in holding a revival. The services will begin on the first Sunday afternoon in July and last the entire week. The public is cor dially invited to attend. Sunday School Sunday School met at 10:30 o'clock, at Carey's Baptist Church Sunday July 14, 1931, with Supt. B. D. Adcock in charge of the service. Preaching services are held by the Pastor Rev. John F. Mitchiner the first Sunday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock and the third Sunday morning at 11:00 o'clock. The public is cordially invited to attend these services. B. Y. P. U. Sei’\’ice The B. Y. P. U. Service of Carey’s Baptist Church met Sunday June 14, at 7:00 o'clock for its usual ser vice. The group •a.ptain in charge was Miss Mattie Adcock, the topic for dis cussion was “The Bethany Home.” Arrangements were made for a Se nior B. Y. P. U. Study Course to be held this week. Miss Mary Currin will conduct the cour^ . The book to be studied is the “Senior B. Y. P. U. Administration Book.” The public is cordially invited to at- end the Sunday night services of the Union. A Born Preacher I Rev. Jesse C. Shull, of Virginia, is related closely to 65 ministers, mostly Presbyterians. Misses Julia Harris, and Frances Fleming spent last week as the guests of Mrs. Bob Parish in Henderson. Mrs. W. C. Rogers of Epsom spent the week end here as the guest of her daughter, Mrs. M. Hicks. Misses Sadie Frazier, Grace Vaughan and Fraflk Thomas jVaughan are spending several days at South Bos ton, Va., as the guests of their aunt. Miss Olive Hicks of Dabney was the guest of Miss Lucille Vaughan Sun day. EPSOM NEWS COKESBURY NEWS By 'VERGIE HICKS The Vance County Sunday School Convention will be held Thursday June 25, at Cokesbury M. E. Church with an all day service and dinner on the grounds. Last year it was held at Carey's Baptist church ,and an ineresting program and a bountiful dinner was thoroughly enjoyed. This year’s Convention promises to prove even better, and a full attendance from each church in the county is expected. There will be a Prayer Meeting Ser vice conducted by the Pastor, Rev. P. D. Woodall at Cokesbury M. E. church Wednesday P. M. June 17, at 6:45 o'clock. The public is cordially in vited. Mrs. J. H. Hicks has returned from the Maria Parham hospital where she v;nderwent an operation for appendi citis recently. Friends of Miss Grace Vaughan will be glad to learn that she is able to be out again, after an illne^ of several weeks. Miss Lucie Hicks was the guest of Miss Lula Adcock last week. Miss Kathleen Edwards spent sev eral days last week 's.s the guest of Miss Lelia Haye at Ridgeway. Marriage Announcement Mrs. James W. Hicks announces the approaching marriage of her daugh ter, Lucie Mary, to James Lee Rid- ant of Warrenton, N. C. on June 19, 1931 at Boydton, Va. Mrs. Alex Buchanan who has been ill several weeks is reported to be im proving saH^factorily, her many friends will be glad to learn. By MRS. W. A. HOYL Miss Bessie Lee,Alston has returned home from Alebemarle, where she taught the pa.st year. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Macon attended the Graduation Exercises of the Eas tern Carolina Teachers College at Greenville, N. C., their daughter Miss Sue Brodie Macon, member of the graduating class, returned home with Lhem. Mrs. Guy Winn and little daughter Ruina have returned to their home near Manson, after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Winn. Miss Margaret Alston has returned to her home after a visit to E. C. T. C. her Alma Mata where she attended the graduating exercises. Miss Carrie Alston, who has been visiting her sister, Mr. R. L. Bell of Macon has returned to her home. Mrs. Lottie Weldon and Miss Mar garet Alston who have been attending a session of the Grand Chapter of the Orer of The Eatern Star, which was recently held at Elizabeth City have returned home. They were accom panied by Mr, and Mrs. C. T. Hudson. Miss Sue Edgerton is visiting Miss Sue Brodie Macon. Miss Gussie Poster has returned to spend the summer with Mis.s Margaret .Alston. A surprise birthday dinner was given Sunday at the home of Mrs. J. T. Wel don, honoring her, by her children. Miss Sadie Pace Wins Medal In a recent county contest sponsored by the Jambes Post of the American' Legion of Franklin county in which they offered for the best Essay writ- ! ten, a medal. The medal was presented j to Miss Sadie Pace who was declared the winner. The Post also gave a' beautful Loving Cup to the Epsom High School, this to remain the pro- I EXPERTS TO DESCRIBE WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE WORLD New York,—Do /ou know that a miniature wireless robot operating in a free balloon a mile or so in the sky is one of the new'est devices employed to give you your weather information? Or that there are remote island uni verses of stars incredible distances away which seems to be rushing into space at apparent velocities of 12,000 miles a second? Or that meteors usually are cold when they hit the ground and that stories of fires started by meteorites are like the one time report of Mark Twain’s death, “greatly exaggerated?” Or that metals sometimes contract under heat and expand when cold as shown by X-rays? .Or that lightweight concrete, alum inum building beams, glass walls and composition furniture are here or on the way? In answering these and other ques tions, The Associated Press plans to present a series of stories on “What’s Going on in the World Today,” the latest developments and future pros pects in many lines of scientific and aesthetic endeavor . These stories will be told by experts in thetir fields. Scientists are continually at work trying to learn more about the me chanics of life, says Dr. Reginald G. Harris, director of the biological labo ratory at Cold Spring Harbor, New York. E. A. Horton, professor of an thropology at Harvard, relates recent discoveries that carry man’s cultural history further and further back into the misty past. H. L. Menchen, well-known critic and editor, has something to say about the possibilities of a better type of litera ture appearing as a result of the de- perty of the school for one year. A regular meeting of Wellons Chap ter No. 167 O. E. S. was held Pi'iday night. Splendid reports were read on the Grand Chapter Meeting. The Children Day exercises will be held at Liberty-V^nce Christian Church the third Saturday in June. Dinner will be served on the grounds and a pageant will be given in the afternoon. Church Notices Regular preaching services will be held at the Christian Church the third Sunday. Services will be con ducted by the Pastor Rev. H. E. Crutchfield. Sunday School at 10 o’clock Sunday A. M. Christian Endeavor at 7:45 P. M. presslcn, in a review of the current literary scene in America. Han-ey wiley Corbett, chairman of the architectural commission of the 1933 Chicago World's Fair, will tell of America's present day attitude toward buildings as functional structures to be used as long as they serve and to be scrapped the moment they are out of date. Police officers go to school at North western University to learn about forensic ballistics—the science or art of bullet and fireann identification. Lieut. Co, Calvin Goddard, who was called in on the St. Valentine Day mas- acre in Chicago, will describe this new and little known science. Prof. c. V. P. Young, of Cornell Uni versity, punctures some popular beliefs concerning ventilation, while William Braid White, an expert in acoustics will tell what the sound engineer is doing to increase pleasant noises and de crease unpleasant ones. Other stories will touch on the latest radiology, sports, surgery, medicine, entertainment, physics, radio, eviation, seismology, art, astronomy, education, paleoiitoloy, criminoly, geology, music, government. Industry and other sub jects. This Is the first time that many scientists have written popular re views of their work for newspaper distribution. —Warsaw—Three fellows who rolled a barrel of herring 250 miles from Gyd- nla to Marshal PilsudAi’s doorstep have been rewarded. They did It to show they were husky enough to work. 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