Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Feb. 25, 1965, edition 1 / Page 2
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Community News Roundup Louisburg ' j Mrs. Sue Newell Clark and ' Robert Clark II from Washing- < ton, D. C. spent the past week- : end with Mrs. W. D. Ja'ckson In Loulsburg. 1 I Rock Spring < Rev. George Harbuck of Bir mingham, Ala., was our guest speaker Sunday for the morning worship service. Rev. and Mrs. T. E. Lolley were near Winston Salem for services. ? Mr.- and Mrs. Robert- Ward J had as their guests last week Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hall of Brltt, Iowa, enroute from " > Florida. While here they j toured the Duke Gardens and the Chapel in Durham and also -Visited Mr, and Mrs. Charles Floyd in Raleigh. \ c Mr. and Mrs. James Wilder, 1 Mr. and Mrs. K. Ott, Miss Carol Wilder and Wayne Baker visitecT Mrs. Kenneth Moore and girls in Tarboro Sunday. Mrs. Janice Wilder of Janice's J Hairstyling Is attending the *55 International Beauty Show In v New York City from Saturday 4 through Thursday. Fran^linton j Mr. Arth/ir Evans has return- ? ed home after being a patient ; at Baptist Hospital in Winston- >, Salem.. . Mrs. N. A. Blaqk.ls visiting ^ Mr. and Mrs. William Black > and family in Raleigh. c Mr. and Mrs. John Farabow and family of Klnston visited \ Mr and Mrs. L. R. Ethridge a during the week-end. I c Seven Paths Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Wltmer r W Silver Springs, Md., visited ? from Friday night through Sun- 1 day with Mrs. Lucy Wilder, S Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Lartz and the J. S. Collies. I Mr. and Mrs. William Har- I mon ind their four children of Rocky Mount spent Saturday -wtth Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Col - lie. Mrs. Sidney Alford Is spend ing this week In Rocky Mount : with Mr. and Mrs. Bayard Sykes. Mrs. Larry Cooke and son Keith of Norfolk attended wor ship services at Cypress Baptist Church Sunday morning. They were visiting the R. H? Wheelers. ? ?" ? Mr. and Mrs. Evander Lee McGregor and Van of Fayette ' vllle spent a part of the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Lee McGregor. Daylon Inscoe , of the V, S. Navy* In Norfolk wars at home , with Mr. and Mrs. Preston Inscoe for'the weekend. Rev. and Mrs. Coleman Thom . as and sons were ln.Wlndsot with relatives th^ latter part of the week. \ ' Mr. and Mrs. Ben Proctor of Rocky Mount spent Saturday In the. community with Mrs. * Emma Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Slddy Harris and his daughter from Na$h<r vllle visited Mr. Hardy Moore on Thursday , > Mr. and Mrs. Kearney Har FAT OVERWEIGHT Available to you without a doctor s prescription, our product called Gal axon. Ybu must lose ugly. fat or ?our money back. Galaxon is a tablet and easily swal lowed Get rid of excess fat and live longer. Galax on costs $3.00 and ia sold ,on this guarantee: If not satisfied for any reason, just return the package to your druggist and get your full money back. No ques tions asked. Galaxon is sold with this guarantee by: BOOGGIN DRUG STORK ? IjouiMburfC ? ?, MAIL ORDERS FILLED. rlson . and family of Rocky Mount, Mr. and Mrs. B. P. tfinton of Spring Hope called >n Mr. and Mrs. Pete Moore Sunday. Mr. Grady Fisher of Ring-, vood was In the M. E. Fisher lome for a short visit on Sun lay. Youngsville Capt. and Mrs. C. V. Timber lake and family of Washington, D. C. visited, with his mother, Mrs. Timberlake, Sr., during, the weekend. ' ? , . Misses Marilyn Timberlake and Kay Hall of Cast Carolina -ollege visited with their fami lies over the weekend. Mr; and Mrs. William H. Fleming were In Rocky Mount luring the weekend to attend he wedding of his sister. Justice Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Rice .pent the weekend In Durham vlth Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Whe ess, Terry and Danny, Mr. ind Mrs. John Rice, Johnny Hid Connie Sue. 'Mrs-. John Walker and daugh er from LaCrosse, Va., were juests of Mrs. Vera S. White, Mrs. Walker's mother, Sunday. They brought Mr. Carlos White, ?ho had spent the previous week with his sister, home. Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Wicks rlslted Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wicks, Cherry, Lorrl and Gary )f Durham Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bowden rlslted Mrs. Bowden's sister ind her husband, Mr. and Mrs. 5. E. HUllard, In Durham Sun lay. Mrs. Curtis Bgwden, Mrs. En iis Strickland and Mls> Janet Strickland from Butner visited Kr. and Mrs. Ernest Moore Sunday afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. A. A. Pever lU, Keith and Joy visited rela tives In Roanoke, Va., Sunday night and Monday. Wood Week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Gupton and Mrs. Ridley &own were Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Brown of Gibson viH*T Mr- Sam Brown of Lit tleton, and Mr. and Mrs. Rob Johnson of Vaughan. Mrs. J. L. Mercer and two daughters, Llbby and Linda, of Wilson spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Read. Week-end guests of Mrs. Ma ned*. Gupton and family were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Denton and grandson Ronnie from Raleigh. ?Sr. and Mrs. Ray Bose'man and son Perry of Raleigh were Saturday supper guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Blllie Mae Gupton. *' . . Week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Murphy were Mr.'i and' Mrs. Warren Wlnstead and son Keith and Mrs. Vawrence Bradley of Rocky Mount. ' Mr. and Mrs. Louis 'Gupton and children, Debbie and Dan ny, and Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Gupton from Butner visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gupton over the weekend. Week-end guests of Mr. Tom Pearce and family were his brother, Mr. Callle Pearce, and two of his friends, Mr. Phillip and Mr. BUI Kemp, from New port News; Va. Mrs. Nancy Gupton and Mrs. Leah Leonard of Butner visited with Mrs.-Supton's sister, Mrs. Charles Burnette, and Mrs. Ben Gupton last week. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Heir and children of Newport New*, Va., visited with Mr. ind Mr*. Percy L. Gupton on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Heir and children were overnight guest* Saturday of Mr. and Mr*. Lloyd Gupton. Mike Leonard, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Leonard, left on Sunday (or South Carolina, where he will enter Service. Mr. Jack Denton and grandson Ronntefrom .Raleigh visited his sister, Mrs. Sue Shearln, and family on Sunday. Misses Frances and Beth Sturges df Raleigh spent the weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tolbert Sturges and family. , "v - Week-end guests of Mrs. Dol lle Leonard were Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Turner and their daugh ter,. Miss Dorthv Dean Turn er, of Raleigh and Mr. Jewel Leonard of Fa^eltevllle. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Fuller were overnight guests of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Fuller, in Rocky .Mount. "Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mattox of Rocky Mount and their son, James Bragg Mattox, of Red Springs visited with Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Fuller of Friday. Mr., and Mrs. Leslie Garner Coley and Mrs. Coley's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Dunkin, from Goldsboro visited with Mr. Coley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ivey Coley, over the week end. Mitchiner AC -3 Festus Cannadyof Peru, Ind., spent the weekend at home. i Mr. Charlie J3os wick of Wil mington was here fiver the w^enend to visit Mrs. Mollie Goswick and family. Mrs. Sjisle Pruitt a'hd Mrs. Wilder vfctted Mrs. Vallie H. Cooke and John Ell Win ston in Rex Ho&oital on Friday night; both are improving. Mr. and Mrs. John L^eWttd er, Jan, Rian and Barry visited in Raleigh on Sunday. Thfe^ also visited Mrs. Co<ik at Rex Hospital. The Rev. Thomas Clark visit ed Mrs. Kate Sherrod and Mrs. Ora Layton at May view Rest Home in Raleigh and Mr. Barney Burgess at Veterans .Hospital in Durham Sunday. Mr.# and Mrs. Dan Holt of Carolina Beach have been visit ing in Durham and Franklin County and fished at Mitchi ners Pond with Mr. Owen Wild er arid Red Holt Tuesday. . P Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Roland of near Henderson visited the Owen Wilde rsv on Saturday and had sjjpper with the T. H. Ed wards family. Mr. Roland was celebrating a birthday Saturday. About - Your Home Wallpaper can do all kinds ol decoraJlng tricks I or you. A room can De rn ide to look larg er, smaller,- to have a Higher celling, a lower celling, tcj seem C9oler or warmer through your choice of oilpaper. Many bad effects of structure can be overcome with sklllf^ use of paper. The design m pattern tends to blot out ugly pipes, cracks In plaster and badly shaped rooms If you have a hall that Is narrow and dark, try papering one side with a Simple scenic wallpaper and painting the cell ing and opposite side with the background color of the paper. This will cause the hall to seetn spacious and If the paper chosen has a light background color, the hall can be made much brighter. Wallpaper should be fitted to the type of home It Is to decorate as well as the kind of furniture In the home. This Is a simple process. Your choice of type, color and design Is endless. There are examples of Early Ameri can, Colonial, French, Modern, In fact any kind of pattern you could want. Paper can be very expensive, (for the scenic and Imported papers) reasonable 6r cheap. As with most Items, It Is usually false- economy to In vest In the cheap product. The best buy for moat of us Is In the reasonably priced paper. U you txiy from a well-known com pany you will find the paper wilt last without fading, wiy wash If advertised to be wash able- -will, In general, give satisfactory . service for a reasonable length of time. Franklin Mem. Hospital Notes The following were patients In the hospital Thursday morn ing: WHITE PATIENTS Robert Thurston Barnette, Frankllnton, Tazzie. Braswell, Bunn; Maude Clapton, Frank linton; Iola Collins, Castalia; Gertie Winston Conyers, Frankllnton; Mary G. Crlpe, Indiana; Clarence Ji. Frlsble, Louisburg, William E. Good win, Frankllnton;' Paul Gupton, ZebiJlon; Jarrtes M. Harris," Spring Hope, Vlolette Harris, Louisburg; Claude C. ' Hayes, Louisburg; Harold W. Hudson, Louisburg; Charlie C. Johnson, Louisburg; ? Myrtlce Leonard, Castalia; Sid Lloyd, Louisburg, Betty Mason, Wake Forest; Lu cille Hayes Matthews, Castal ia, Ann Medlln, Frankllnton; Nancy- Grey Mltchlner; Louis burg; Peggy Naylor, Wake For est; Roy Overton,. Louisburg; .Bertha Phelps, Louisburg; Lela Preddy, Frankllnton; Carson Ray, Middlesex; Angela Thorpe, Castalia; Joel C. Wester, Louisburg; Louis A. Wheless, Louisburg; Thomas Wheless, Louisburg; David Lee Wilder, Castalia; Llnnle M. Williams, Louisburg; Donna C. Wlnstead, Butner; Paul D. Woodllef, Klt trell; Hazel Jeffreys, Louis burg; COLORED PATIENTS Martha Arrlngton, Louisburg; Bennie Brodie, Frankllnton; Eugene Foster, Louisburg; Ra chel Hunt, Frankllnton; Geral dlne Lasslter, Louisburg; Susie Mitchell, Louisburg) Alfair Stone, Louisburg; Cornelia Wil liams, Warrenton; Willie Frank Wright, Louisburg. Deaths INFANT HORTON. Timothy Horton, 17 days, died Wednesday. Graveside ser vices were held at 1 p.m. to day^^t the Ransdell's Chapel ChurclN^emetery with the Rev. Jimmy Young officlatlon. Survivors Mncludeo the par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hor ton of Rt. 1, YourtgMrllle; one sister, Debra Of the home; three' brothers, Donald, Jerry and Michael Horton, all of* the home; the maternal grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover Murray of Rt. 1, Louisburg; the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover Horton of Rt. 4, Louisburg. MRS. ORA M. LAYTON Frankllnton- -Mrs. Ora Ball Moore Layton, 57, died Wed nesday. She was a Franklin County native. Funeral ser vices will be held at 3 p.m. Friday at the Un^on View Bap tist Church, of which site was a member, with the Rev. W. M, Dameron officiating, assisted by th^ Rev. William Clark. Burial will be- in the Fairview Cemetery. Survivors Include one sister, Mrs. Claudia Earley of Ra leigh; one brother, M. C. Ball, of Frankllnton; and ttyo grand children. i . 4-H Club The Needmore 4-H Club met" Thursday night at the home of Jan Wilder iflth tet) members I present. Mary Pat Weston opened the meeting with the 4-H pledge and the pledge to the nag. The meeting was then turned over to Mrs. H. C. Goswlck. The muffin contest was dis cussed. Four members from our club decided to enter this contest. Jan Wilder cooked muffins tor the' members pres ent. Film Revue Baby, Rain Must Fall This film will probably be misunderstood, but Its purpose Is to show why a wife con tinues to love her shiftless husband. The story opens when Henry Thomas (Steve: McQueen), his wife, Georgette (Lee Remlck) and small daughter are reunit ed In his s'mril home town In Texas after his parole from prison. Thomas' boyhood,- 'In the foster home of a hardhearted woman and misunderstanding i by the townspeople, could be ' blamed for hts neurotic be havior which shifts from ten derness to brutality. Miss Remlck Is patient, understanding and though they i are deeply In love old haunts lead to trials that wrench the heaTt of the viewer. afar you ??? your doctor, ? bring your prescription to !' C'<H <pMimAcq 4 I SLICED COUNTRY HAM.99t r n r r> 1 1 r\nrf*r rn qi ipcn ? ? ? BOLOGNA 3us 1.00 rutin UKtoatu BUTTER FISH 3 ,M"? Luzianne Instant COFFEE r i i 2 Oz. JAR ( LUNCHEON MEAT 12 Oz. CANS 0 - RESH CUT UP ' JlWi JACK BONE,. 37* MEATY CHUCK SQUARE CUT NO BONEY ENDS IT'S SWIFT'S iUPERB SELF RISING or x ? aai \ PET ^ ^ * CARNATION flfc,, IP A milk 3:45( COKEY * 0* ft A X SAUSAGE 3 89( ILLSBURY OR BALLARD* AA||X BISCUITS JI89e JUICY FLA JVMW I I LH. ORANGES ... 45* RAVE TOILET lAA tissue 8 "49* BBS HOSE 3"1.00 / WHERE YOUR FOOD ^ i U. S. No. 1 WHITEv POTATOES 10 ? 63t DOLLAR BUYS MORE J WE DON'T MEET COMPETITION WE MAKE IT ' rRED SLICING . TOMATOES 1 5C
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
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Feb. 25, 1965, edition 1
2
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