?To7~Box"I5?35"mv*"# w# Ano* T - Loulovlllo 1, Ky. Your Best \r\X?** ? _ Advertising ? Medium Coqp. (Blje $8arrrn IRprnri) Your Best Advertising Medium VOLUME 69 Subscription Price $3.00 a Year 10 ** records show thti* t' v a? ? >? owner of that Mock of jsr.-r >r jty from what Is ikuv R?se> 5 and 10$ Store to CXtom'fl Service, at which location was their home. Records also show that he was the owner of the property which is now occupied by Diamond's store. William McRorie and hU en tire famllyleft Warrenton lnthe early part of 1800 and made this home in Davidson County where descendants of tMsfihH ily still live. Mrs. John Kerr, who does much historical and ftftwl? gical research assisted M McRorie In obtaining &? formation he Was seeking. I. also said that Mrs. MootgPAt ery's book "Old Times In War renton" was also of much help to him and has much Informa tion about his grea grandfather, William Loss Is Covered By Insurance No leads have been found in the $10,000 robbery of the Peoples Bank of Norlina around 12:30 last Friday. The bank loss is fully cov ered by insurance, Dwight Scot ten, executive vice president of the bank, said yesterday. State and county police and the FBI are still searching for the man who robbed the bank at gunpoint and his accomplice who escaped in a 1957 Oldsmoblle and evaded all road blocks to make their escape. At the time of the robbery only Theo Stallings, assistant cashier and Mrs. Julian Farrar, teller were on duty. Other em ployees were_ out for dinner The robber entered the bank at 12:33 p. m. and asked Mrs. Farrar for change for a $5.00 bill. She gave him three one dol lar bills and two dollars In change. The man said that he did not want the change and handed Mrs. Farrar a cloth bag and told her to fill it up. The bag appeared to be a pillowslip, tied at one end. As Mrs. Farrar at tempted to untie the bag, the robber told her to turn it around and fill it up. As~ the robber ordered Mrs. Farrar to fill the bag, he point ed a pistol at Stallings and or dered him to lieflat on thefloor. As Mrs. Farrar hesitated mo mentarily Stallings told her to do what the man said. After Mrs. Farrar had com piled with the order to fill the bag, the robber told her to lie flat on the noor. He told both Stallings and Mrs. Farrar if they moved he would kill them. When the employees heard the door close, they gave the alarm, and State Trooper Wallace Brown, at that time at the of fice of Magistrate N. G. Hud glns, was quickly reached, and he contacted other officers as he drove rapidly up Highway No. 1 towards Mlddleburg. The robber was seen running down the street towards Mitch ell's used car lot across from the Norlina Methodist Church with a package under his coat. At the used car lot he jumped Into a 1957 Oldsmoblle, de scribed as being whiteandpink, and the driver raced up No. 1 Highway for a few hundred yards before turning toward Oine. Officers said that the car turned on 1-85 at Oine and | headed towards Henderson. That was the last officers saw of the car. The robber is described as being a Negro, light in color, I and about 35 years old. He had a "Beatle" type haircut and was wearing a brown cap and a three-quarter length top coat. $ Highway troopers quickly (See BANK, page J) - Don't Forget Christmas isn't long past and chances are that some at the kids' toys are already gone aeyend repair, Mrs. C. V. Whtt tord, executive secretary of the Warren County Tuberculosa and Health Association, yesterday. She added) "But Christmas Seal i buttons will continue their 1 against TB and other i tory disease all year 1 you forget? it Isn't i Christmas Seals ? Ml lasting gift you'll havegiwiht