anroird L ffarreh I Better Farm Homes are on the increase partly as a result of credit aid from the Farmers Home Administration of the U. S. Departmei^t of A^ricul- tnre. Top, left, Is the home of Mr. and Mrs. Isado O. Vernon, dairy fanners of Mt. Hermon, La. Standing; with Vernon, cen ter, by his tractor in front of his house are Farmers Home Bepresentatlve J. A. Lloyd and County Agent T, 3. Bntler. Top center, anr Mr. and Mrs. Wil son Gerald of Omim, N. C., studying the progress of the oats growing in front of their old house at right of their new one. Top, right, are Mr. and Mrs. Fred D. Lockhart, dairy farmers of LouisTilie, Ga., and Farmers Home Bejwesentative JTosephus Johnson, left. Lock hart is dusting his slirubhery. Looking at television at bottom, left, are Mr. and Mrs. John H. Malone and one of their six children, Clara Anne, S, of Fickens, Misi. The Malones have already paid their 1957 annual note from the sale of livestock. Bottom, center, are Mrs. John B. Greenlee and two of her children, Helen Joyce and Samuel in a teeth-washing session in the bath room of their Ethel, Miss., home. Checking on their home-canning in their mo dem kitchen, are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Graves, tobacco farmers of Carson, Va. These homes will be the center of interest during building a new home or remodeling? Telephones, I need to he planned, too! Make tout new home really modem bjr pLuming ahead for "built-in” telephone facilities. Telephone wires can be concealed imuU the walls. Outlets can be provided for pnttitt and fiiiure telephone extensions. Easjr ai^ inexpensive white you’re building or remodeling. n«-planniag will nuke your home attractiye, convenient, saleable. We’U b«-gladto talk ifrover with you, your architect, builder or contractor. No charge, of course. For further information, send for a free copy of the booklet "Telephones Need To Be Planned, Too”. Or call our Business Office. DURHAM TELEPHONE COMPANY the observance of National|28 to May 4.—IISDA Photo. Home Deconstration M^eek, April I F. S. T. C. TO STAGE ANNUAL FINE ARTS WEEKS, MAYS T010 FAYETTEVILLE The annual Fine Arts Week at the Fayetteville State Teach ers College, under the sponsor ship of the Area of Music and Fine Arts, will extend from May 5 through May 10, and will disclose an assortment of talent for music and for the other fine arts. The week-long program will get underway oh Sunday, May 5, at 5:30 p.m. with a piano recital by Dr. Alfred Pouinard of the Music faculty at Johnson C. Smith University. One of the most brilliant pi anists of our day and an au thority on French folk mus^, YEARS OLD 6 Park ATilford Kentucky Bred STRAIGHT BOURBON . WHSSKEV $3.15 4/f «r. $2.45 , van “Some Wives and All Widows Believe in Life Insurance’^ NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY W. L. COOK, Manager BRANCH OFFICE 606Fayetteville Street Koituck, «r.l|W ■oortiMi Whhtoy • S6 rtoot • CLASSIF UNION ELECTRIC COMPANY, INC KLBOrmiOAli APPUANOU KLKOTMCAL gCPPUM UOBI1NO nXTCBBS ILICmOAl. OONTBAC1INO Day PkMM (-cm im rATcmyiuLi boad M Shkto Mg. pMlwd - - I1.7S 1 or S mrto ••••••«. Ztc I or man mu ISc D«linc» packed ■Urti, Xtc (CaOophaM) SANITARY LAUMI»KE88 AND CLEANERS DIAL I-4N1 Cmmk riM StiMl Aad Lakawood At«mm GOAL K. Dr KVEBT WEIGH" McGHEE goal CO. tndiac M. H. w*An and son CA1X.S-1M1 ED ADS THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957 PAGE THREE Dr. Pouinard has studied and taught music In France and holds the doctorate in Musi cology from Lavel University in Canada. Among the numbers to appear on his program are "La Campanella" by Liszt, “Noc turne in D Flat Major" by Cho pin, and "Allegro Appassionato" by Saint-Sanes. Included on the program also will be two of Dr. Pouinard's own composi tions. He has given conccrts in France, Holland, CannUa and in the United States. Appearing Wednesilay even ing in the SeabrooJt /luditurium will be the Creative Dance group under the direction of Sylvia Allen of Fayetteville, and at the Friday assembly period students from the Willow Grove School at Whittakers, North Carolina will be seen in a variety program. With Christopher W. Kemp as director and Charlotte Boyd as accompanist, the Johnson C. Smith University Choir will ap pear in concert Friday eveninjg, May 10. Opening the perfor mance with Ralph Vaughan William’s “For All the Saints" and Beethoven’s “Hallelujah”, the group will move on to R. N. Dett’s ever-beautiful "Listen to the Lambs", and Gounod’s powerful “O Divine Redeemer" and will close with a a popular group of numbers including Dawson’s “Jesus Walked This Loneaome Valley.” The art display will be on exhibit throughout the week. Instructors in the Area of Music and Fine Arts are H. T. Chick, J. S. Smith, S. W. Payne, and Mary T. Eldridge, Chairman. Births In Durham For April 22 To 27 The following births were re ported to the Durham Oits' and County Health Department dur ing the week of April 22 through 27, 1957: Moses and Maggie Richard son, twin girls. Dodie and Annie McClary, girl. William and Doris Ruffin, boy. Wallace and Eva Cooper, girl. Marvin and Bertha Wilkins, boy. David and Nettie Parker, boy. James and Rebecca Hodges, girl. Albert and Eunice Starr, girl. B&MFINANCE COMPANY Easter b Around The Corner Get “CASH IN A FLASH” From The B&M Finance Co. PHONE PA. S-1316 304 E. FOURTH ST. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. CHICKEN PEED, INDEEDI The dollars that remain when your bills have been paid may not be many . . . may seem scarcely worth setting aside; but consider this fact: It is with similar modest sums that Americans have built total bank savings in excess of $80 billion/ When it comes to thrift, it’s determination that counts. In 1956, the cost of living reached record heights — yet Americans deposited over $3 billion in bank ac counts. Today the average balance for the nation’s more than 73 million bank savers is over $1,000! A Limi, BANKID mOULAKlY, ADDS UP TO A LOT: START SAVING NIXT MYDAY—WITH USI Mechanics And Fanners Bank nUltHAM AND RALEir.H, NORTH CABCHJMA "Taste matters most to me... and lUCKIESTASTi 9 Service Garaget SPEIGm’’S AUTO SERVICE Boed SottIm ... StcMi OlMBias SmtIm ... Beeapviac • • ■ Wkael AUgniM^ Fttilcrew * ruetteTllto Btrceli raom 9-tMl INLAID UNOLSDM. ABPBALT BCBBHt AND WALL TILB —Vim ■■ttiB ■*» ■ - - Hnnt linoleum And Tile Company, Inc. PhoBM NIcM SMI BOXBOBO BOAD Dwi't Let TImm 8tew« Ov 0«Mm wi DniM, er leaffM rieen Prel Te«. Cell VEREEN Hoiue Cleaning And Lmm Service PHONB t-t««s neiiiilelliler la WINDOW^AND PLOOB OLBANOrO LOANS No Red Tave LOINS $10.00 TO $100.00 SAUN HNANCE COMPANY Locally Owmad ON SKUBRT AND FKBSONAL 8|GNATURS XM NORTH MAIN 8T. PHON»^ t-t4M waanGHSMJM, north carmjha MAIiaAilir TYNU k a aingier who switches from opera to muaical com edy to jazz with equal succesB. She has no favorite style in muaic— but when it comee to cigarettes, Margarets mind is made up. “1 want the one that tastes best,” she says. “To me, that’s a Lucky!” "IT’S TOASTID lo tail* bHt»rl # AT HOMI, Margaret aqjoya playing the piano, listaning to record* or lingering over a Lucky. "I never cared for MU* on a cigarette,” she aaya. "I’d rathar have good ■moking all the way through. With Luckiea, that’a exactly what I get." A UMKT ia all cigarette . . . nothing but fine tobficco—mild, naturally good-taat- ing tobacco that’* TOASTED to taate even better. Bet you’ll lay, aa Margaret does; "Luckiea are the beat-taating cigarette I ever nnokad!*’ LUCKIES TASTE BEHER Cl«an«r, Fresher, Smootherl tfimt it tmr miiHt mmt

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