I . , . ,. .-t PUBLISHED BACH THURSDAY \ | I^AXEKE OXROCXMA. XKHMi?ed in infancy. There were no other children. Her mother had moved in with "Mr. Bullard" and "Miss Annie" a few years after they were married. Bullard says her mother helped her raise her children and lived with her until her death years later. As the children grew up, Bullard gradually returned to nursing. She says her mother's willingness to help people in need influenced her to do the same. TTte mother-daughter home nursing skills became recognized throughout Robeson County. Word spread and calls came from expectant mothers who were nearing their delivery dates. "Women back then always stayed home and gave birth. And after the child came, the mother stayed in bed for several days to rest," remembers Bullard. She says her role was to help out with the mother and child after birth. It was during a prenatal assignment that Bullkrd was introduced, unexpectantly, to mid wifery. "The doctor had been notified that my patient had gone into labor, but he was with tmother woman giving birth two miles away." she explains. "The doctor didn't arrive in time. I got that one," she adds. She says she knew what to do. "I'd watched the midwife during my own deliveries." The home nurse was to miss attending church services three Sundays in a row that month because she was busy delivering the same number of babies. "Dr. Roscoe McMillian told me he ought to give me a license to deliver them," she laughs. Shortly thereafter, Bullard was summoned to San Antonio to help after the birth of a child to her daughter in law and military-based son. After a few weeks stay in Texas, the grandmother was invited to spend a two-weeks stay with friends in New York. While there, she took a nursing job. "I went to stay for two weeks and ended up staying two years." she says. After her longtime female patient died, Bullard moved back to her native Robeson County. There she resided mostly with her youngest daughter. Her stays were most times short because of appeals from others in need of a home nurse. > Her longest nursing assignment came from a local citizen living near the four-mile curve four miles east of Pembroke. She carefully packed her belongings,including her pedal sewing machine, her Bible which had traveled with her throughout ? ???? ? r her many assignments and a formal letter of recommendation from a New York physician. She was to stay four years at that job. ? Bullard says she never forgot people who had rendered support to her and her children during her young widowhood. Among them was Charlie Moore, her childhood school teacher and lifelong Prospect community resident. When Mrs. Moore's health began to fail, Bullard was hired to care for the wife of the man who had stuck by her when she lost her husband. "Mr. Moore was as good a friend as I ever had in the world," Bullard affectionately comments. She was in the Moore employ for about two years. There were several other nursing assignments before she retired in 1976 at age 75. And even though failing health does not allow her to actively assist sick people, she lends comfort through telephone calls to them. Family members sometimes drive her for short visits to shut ins in neighboring communities. She no longer sews on the antique sewing machine which sits in her rural Pembroke home. She keeps it as a reminder of times when it was necessary to sew for her seven children. Now a daughter tailor makes the dresses she wears. A longtime friend sews bonnets which she now wears as she did as a young girt growing up in a rural area. A niece has contributed to her headwear wardrobe as well. Cataract surgery has enabled her to read the enlarged print in her Bible.She doesn't much care for television and usually plays it for the company of it. Recovery from a new fatal appendectomy five years ago has been slow, but the former church goer holds strong the Christian faith she professed 74 years ago. When the nurse gets emotionally puny, she practices on herself. She recall- she was a very young child, her father gave her a four-page booklet entitled "The life of Christ." "I toted it around until I wore H out I didn't vtmu ? doM baby. I just wanted my little book "" * Yep! Memories of the words contained in the book serve as a big dose of medicine for the nurse who served others so well. Annie Bell Bullard, wearing a favorite bonnet, casts a smile. ?? H Mill IIP 'HJWi 'W IS. Shelly Ronita Strickland Mr. & Mrt. Ronald Strickland 1988 Awards Banquet Recipients N amed Lunbe* Regional Development Association. Inc. and Jaimbee Home coming 1986 proudly announce* this year's four (4) Recipients as follows: 1) Henry Berry Lowefy Award ? Mr. Ronald Hammonds, a resident at the 8addletree Community. 8) Business Person of the Year Award - Mrs. Jane C. Oxendine, a resident of Pembroke. N.C. 3) Distinguished Service Award - Rev. Welton Lowiy, a resident of Pembroke. N.C. 4) Advancement of Education Award ? Mrs. Linda Hammonds, a resident of the Saddletree Com munity. The 1988 Awards Banquet will be held on June 30, 1988 at the Pembroke Junior High School Cafe teria beginning at 7:30 p.m. This year's tickets are 16.50 per person. Tickets can be secured by contacting Gary Deeae. Awards Banquet Com mittee Chairman at 521-0354 or 521-0664. Admission tickets can also be secured " at the door'' on June 80, 1988. ITte General Public is encouraged to attend. ~TTi tk