REGISTRATION DAY IS NEXT TUESDAY VOLUME XVII. This, That, €r the Other By MRS. THEO. II- DAVIS ■ pi Until very recently when I d i thear the remark that this world It .s .1 small piace after all, I'd feel k the speaker knew much more than P I and voiced the opinion of one who has seen distan es shrink and shrivel until the (iulf of Mexico * ou.d almost be put in Dave 9 Privette's null pond without much over the dam. It was cm- Wb.irra-s.ng to find my own brain Erefusing to nd any wear the twelve or fifteen thous and miles casually mentioned. H And 1 refuse to believe any Elonger that this world is a small place. It is far and away the big g.st thing I ever saw and I've seen only a very small part of it. But that part makes me realize something of what must be beyond my horizon, lor instance: Week before last my husband went to Elm City and 1 went with him. It is a beautiful drive from here to there, and a nice town when you reach it. We saw miles * of land that were new to me. From there we went to Kenly, where I had been several times before, but ► from another direction. '■>, Two days later we went to Dunn byway of Salem, Smith- Jficld, Four Oaks and Benson. All Bbcyond Benson was new to me. TRAnd 1 tell you there's a lot of land spread out between here and Dunn. l Old houses, new houses and ■ those neither old nor new; cribs, barns and sheds. Tobacco, cotton, * wheat so dead ripe I feared it would fall over, peas, corn, pota toes, over and over we noted them as we rode along. In the yards pe tunias, verbenas, hydrangeas, those rf4d-fashioned coppery- lilies, phlox p'and more petunias. In pastures, pigs, cows, yearlings, mules, goats - and a little kid asleep in a hol low stump. At one place we saw what looked like dozens of head of cattle clustered around a horse that gazed disdainfully afar over their heads. t And folks! Everywhere! Along ! the roads, in stores, at their homes, at work, at play; or idle; well dressed, plainly clad or not clad at all to speak of; old, young and middle-aged; black, white and iblended. It was interesting to connect i some person or persons with each .» place. We remembered that Mrs. f Sultan Flowers and Mrs. A. A. Pippin were from Elm City. In Kenly among many whom I al ready knew 1 saw Claude Gilli kin, about seven when I last knew him at Morehead City, and now owner of a drug store in Kenly. He likes to talk about Morehead I as well as I do and I want to see him again soon. Smithfield makes me think of Mazelle Cham blee, now Mrs. Guy Lee; and Selma reminded us of that nice Mr. Smith who looked after our telephones for years. Benson is where they have that big singing convention and Four Oaks boasts of the biggest rural school in the world. Dunn meant the Miss Pope who used to each at the Kennedy Home and her mother who always sent cakes for Christmas dinner; Miss Mary Warren, former secretary of W M. U. work in this state; Mrs. Bain who was Miss Lydia Yates and is one of the leaders in Sun day school work. It meant Mil * «dred Broughton Corbett and Mrs. A. V. Medlin. But most of all , m. meant my son, his wife and * can 3 babies. Lynne the daughter, a out in front watching for Mar'vhich is a delightful way for the adparents to be greeted. Inside Cbaby, Teddy- craw-led solemnly, of 1 went out to" Williams Lake sure re dozens of cars were parked be of in the afternoon and more who l still coming when w-e left, peaci folks in all of them. °w, in those trips we went only a small fraction of the , of Wake, Nash, Wilson, H - ston and Harnett counties. 1 North Carolina has a hun cur’ counties. And there are forty cri,u states in the Union besides She Zrbulmt tSernrh Procedure Is Given For Registration Men who will register on July I, 1941, were cautioned today by General J. Van B Metts, state director of selective service, to be careful to give to the registrar who registers them correct infor mation as to the place of their permanent residence. Names of the township, county and state must be stated specifically and must be placed on line 2 of the registration card. It is most im portant that men registering be careful to give the correect loca tion of their residence because the place of residence placed on line 2 of the registration card will de termine the local board which will have jurisdiction over them, General Metts emphasized. On the first registration day many registrants gave confusing information, and this resulted in their registration cards often be ing assigned to the wrong local board. This resulted in many com plications and selective seervice agencies were subjected to un i reasonable worry and trouble transferring cards. The new se [ lcctive service regulations, pre pared for the July 1, 1941, reg ! istration, provide that there will be no future transfer of cards. The place of residence of the reg istrant, which will appear on line ! 2 of the registration card, will once and for all determine the local board which has control over the reegistrant. A pi ace is provided on the new registration card for registrants to write the place of residence and the mailing address. The mailing ! address is not so important as the | residence address, because the mailing address may be changed Jas often as the registrant estab | lishes a new address. But the place of residence, to be indicated | on line 2 of the registration card, will never be changed, and the | original card will be assigned to the local board having jurisdiction over the area of the residence address. The new regulations provide | that the registrant shall be per mitted to determine what place he desires to give as his residence when he does not reside in one place all the time, but once that election is made and is stated on registration day and is recorded on the registration card, it may never be changed thereafter. Every man in the State of North Carolina who has attained the 21st anniversary of the day of his birth since October 16, 1940( with a few exceptions not ed below), must registrar with his local selective service board on July 1, State Director J. Van B Metts stated-today. Men required to register in tthis second registration are those who were born on or between October 17, 1919, and July 1, 1920. Boy Pianist Donald Pippin, pianist, ap peared in the annual recital given by the pupils of Quincy Cole in the Woman s Club, Richmond. He is a grandson of C. E. Pippin of Z. hulon Hot Weather Sunday was one of the hottest days of this summer with Monday its equal in oppressiveness. How g\ r, befort the middle of the aft rnoon on Monday a light shower relieved sultry conditions some what. What's The Matter With This 1 ’ Someone has painted the fol lowing on the Zebulon Water tank: “Zebulon. N. C” What is wrong with it? This was a government job. with five more continents con taining countries scattered about over the earth. And billions of people. <£>.<•; . ' ••••: ■■■ - m Ik is THOMAS E. STEELE Tommy Steele At Union Hope On next Sunday night a ten days revival will begin at Union Hope Baptist church, five miles east of Zebulon on the new Rocky Mt. highway. Rev. C. F. Allen of Zebulon will preach Sunday night. There will be services each night through July 8. No day services will be held. Mr. Tommy Steele, a widely known and successful layman in evangelistic work, will preach at each service after Tuesday. Mr. Steele is not an ordained minister, but has been engaged in evangel istic work for a number of years. He is head of the organization that broadcasts over station WPTF each week. The public is invited to all the services. Bank to Close The Peoples Bank and Trust Company of Zebulon will be closed all day on both Friday and Saturday, July 4th and sth, an nounces Cashier R. V. Brown. This procedure is in line with that of banks all over the state and country. Mrs. L. R. Hayes Mrs. L. R. Hayes of Creedmoor died on Sunday morning after an extended illness. Burial services were held at the home on Monday afternoon. Her nieces, Mrs. Mer ritt Massey and Mrs. Riggsby Massey, are residents of Zebulon, the latter having made her home with Mrs Hayes for years before marriage. Buy New Home The Graham Conns have bought the new house just com pleted on Horton Street and have moved into it. This is an attrac tive small house of the modern type and will add much to that part of town. It is next door to Mrs. Julian Horton’s boarding house. Seen and Heard DAHLIA—On Monday Mrs. Ralph Lewis sent to the associate ; editor of this paper a dahlia of 1 the Mrs. Warner variety. Perfect in coloring, it measured nine and j one-half inches across and nearly twenty-four inches around, not including the tips of a fqw petals that were longer than the rest. Mrs. Lewis grows beautiful dahlias each year, using barnyard compost as the main fertilizer. Probably the loudest thing in j Zebulon in proportion to its size was the four-by-six “Motorola” which Bob Sawyer had in the' post office Monday morning. To some at least, it was a new type j of radio. It blared forth with all the vol ume and assurance of something ZEBULON, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1941 Raleigh UCC Has Series of Radio Programs The Raleigh local office of the employment service division of the North Carolina Unemployment Compens ifinn Comnvss'nn has a : SOT S l)t i)iOdJwu6tli Li lulu. d “Nd , tioi I Defense and You," which an mot interesting a d inform all , p rue ll.irly to eanloyeis am un .nployzd people Thesi bn .leasts are being heard week ly, ach Tuesday at 1:30 p. m , ovi R< bn St tiin WPTi. They de. with di industries in clu d in the realm of national del use industries. Series No. 5 was broadcast Tuesday, June 24, 1941, at 1:30 p. m. In sequence the following subjects will be taken up, each Tuesday, there after: Construction Industry; Iron Steel, Metal; Textiles and Leather; Women in Industry; Agriculture; Ship Building; Pho tographic Apparatus and Optical Goods; Machine Tirol Industry. They will appreciate your listen ing in as many times as possible. L J Craven Raleigh Office Change Is Made In Business Announcement is made in this paper of changes recently made m Page Supply Company. This firm will operate in Louisburg as well as in Zebulon; but this town is to be congratulated that at least a part of the force remains here. Graham Conn and Frank Kemp will stay in Zebulon. Statement of consideration for customers and of plans for the remainder of the year will be found on another page. Your at tention is called to it. Bushels, Bushels J. C. Lamm of Bailey, Route 3, was in the Record office Mon day. Mr. Lamm has just finished setting four acres in sweet potato plants. He says he usually makes ibout 200 bushels of No. 1 sweets to the acre, which to the assistant editor sounds like lots of potatoes. M Lamm has a surplus of plants he bedded 35 bushels to grow s'i| s and offers them for sale at 75c a thousand Avon Privette will buy your surplus corn and cotton seed meal. THE SOUTHERN SHOTLERS, of WGBR, will be at Pilot Tourist Home Service Station Saturday night at 8:00 p. m. for a program of free music. They feature Eason Brothers and Raymond Phipps, and broadcast at 2:30 Saturday. J. J. Johnson owns the sta tion; J. S. Alford is the op erator. EGGS —Wallace Reed Brantley jof the Union Hope community brought the editor two eggs, both laid by hens on his farm. One egg had two distinct whites as well as two yellows and while of | the usual shape weighed five ; ounces. An ordinary egg seldom weighs over two ounces, most fall ing below that. Its all-round length the long way was 7 3-4 inches while the short way meas ured 6 1-4 inches. The small egg was shaped like a gourd with a handle and weighed too little for household scales to jbe exact about. Its all-round I length was less than four inches, its “handle” was one-third inch in j diameter, the “bowl” part about i twice as large. It might be feared that the JSrantley hens are crazy with the L - J jBl « m \V * IMlgBg” W- * - < This fourth Carolina farm woman inspects the many cotton articles which will be available under the AAA surplus cotton stamp plan to cotton farmers in stores throughout the state this year. Farmers who curtail cotton acreage will be paid at the rate of VJ cents a pound, on the basis of normal yield, with stamps good for purchases of any and all new cotton goods made in this country. The farmer eats his own wheat on the farm, now he may wear his own cotton, and that without cost to him. More than seventy thousand North Carolina cotton farmers will receive ttvo million dollars in stamps and there will be sheets and shirts, soc\s and shirts, towels and trousers, handkerchiefs and handi cloths a plenty for the farm family. Cotton prices already have felt the stimulus of the reduced acreage and price experts predict markets will hold strong throughout the year. CHURCH NOTES Methodist Church Please note this: We will not have the regular church service sth Sunday morning. Instead there will be programs at the Methodist Orphanage for all who can and will attend. We are in vited to spend the day. We are to carry our lunches with us. Services for sth Sunday: Church school, 10:00. Young people, 7:00. W. M. S. Meets The Wakefield Philatheas met on June 11 at the church. Thir teen were present. The subject Perfect Meeting Held by Rotary Last Friday’s meetmg was the 73rd consecutive 100 per cent one for Zebulon Rotarians; for though Albert Medlin and Vance Brown were absent, one of them had al ready made up attendance. Wes ley Liles, program leader, said that not being a public speaker, he had asked Charles Allen to speak for him. Charles spoke on vacations, emphasizing his subject with a casting reel, a twenty-two rifle, golf clubs and miniature camping tents. He declared that all need va cations yearly, both body and mind requiring rest. He said that one should retain respectability on a vacation, not taking along a bottle or making a hog of himself. He gave each member a slip of paper with the request that he write down the name of the place he would prefer for a va cation. The result was a fifty fifty vote between mountains and seashore. Harry Myers of Raleigh was a welcome visitor. Pneumonia Case Mrs. W. L. Simpson is critically ill in Rex hospital with double pneumonia. She is not allowed to see callers. Her mother, Mrs. M D. Terry, has been with her dur 1 for discussion was Faithfulness and Obedience. After bus i ness hour the hostesses Mes dames R. T. Harris, William Honeycutt and H. B. Rowland, served ice cream and cake. Baptist Church Worship with us Sunday. Our services for June 29 are as fol lows : 9:45 Sunday school. 11:00 Morning worship. Sermon topic: “The World Within the Bible.” 7:30 Young People’s meetings. 8:00 Evening worship. Sermon topic: “Religion No Play.” G. J Griffin, Pastor Hopkins Is Exonerated Coroner Banks has stated that no inquest will be held into the death of Robert Donald Griffin, aged four, who was fatally hurt last week when struck by a car driven by Willie B. Hopkins, member of Zebulon’s police force. The accident occurred as Hop kins was driving along the road one mile north of Raleigh. The child is said to have slid down a bank into the road directly in front of the oncoming car. Every effort was made to avoid hitting him, but there was not enough space to stop the vehicle. The parents agreed in the coroner's decision. Cotton Blossoms The first cotton bloom brought into the Record shop this year was on last Satur day, June 21. The grower was W. C. Creech of Bailey, Route 2, on the farm of M. H. and B. C. Griffin. On Monday two bkioms were brought in by Dee Mayo, colored, who lives on the L. J. Creech farm in Johnston county, Wendell, Route 1. One of the blossoms was red, showing that it had opened not later than Satur day. Mayo says he has not yet seen any boll weevil and REMEMBER TO REGISTER NEXT TUESDAY Local Board Is Ready lor Second Listing of Men Below is a letter which is in itself an announcement On Tues day of next week thousands of young men will register in re sponse to their country’s call. J Van B Metts Brig. Gen., AGD State Director Selective Service Raleigh, N. C. Dear Sir: Tins board is ready for the July 1, 1941 registration. All reg istrants will be registered at the Board office in Zebulon, N. C. Office will be open from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. in keeping with the proclamation of the President of the U. S. A. and the Governor of N C. Yours truly, A C Dawson, Chairman Local Board No. 3, Zebulon Assistance Pay Is High for 1941 Public assistance payments for tthe fiscal year ending June 30 were $627,340 higher than the previous year, Nathan H. Yelton, director of the division of the state welfare department handling old age and dependent children funds, said this week. Os the 1945)-41 amount, $476,- 177 went to needy old people over 65 years of age, of whom 37,734 received checks averaging slOl9 out of the $384,385 dis tributed in this category in June. The June figures for old age assistance included payments av eraging $25.52 and amounting to a total of $15,029 going to 589 widows of Confederate veterans who had met public assistance re quirements and had been trans ferred from the state pension rolls. In June, 23,733 dependent chil dren received an average payment of $7.06 in the total spent for the month of $167,595. All funds are made up jointly by federal, state and local units, the national government contrib uting half the cost of grants and administration and the state and counties making up the remain der on the basis of one-fourth each. The 1940-41 fiscal year repre sents the fourth since North Car olina first instituted its public as sistance program on July 1, 1937, under provisions of the federal Social Security Act. The sixth anniversary of the establishment of the National Youth Administration will be marked by the holding of open house on all NYA projects in North Carolina as a part of a state and national observance on Thursday, June 26. The state celebration of the an niversary features the dedication of the Raleigh resident center, at which time Governor J. M. Broughton will bring greetings and June Rose of Greenville, chairman of the state advisory committee of the NYA, and State NYA Administrator John A. Lang will speak. The program will be broadcast over Station WRAL in Raleigh at 11 :05 o’clock a. m. At 1:50 o’clock p. m. over Sta tion WPTF in Raleigh, June 26, Mr. Lang will speak on the his tory and program of the National Youth Administration The National Youth Adminis tration is now operating 475 proj ects in North Carolina. In Wake county, a resident center near State College is pro viding work in machine, radio, and woodworking shops for de fense industries and manufactur ing gun racks, desks, and other equipment for the United States army. Other Wake county proj ects include a laundry project for negro girls on Cabarrus street, a sewing and pattern making proj ect for white girls on West Har gett street, a homemaking project for negro girls on Cabarrus street, hospital assistance at Rex and St. Agnes hospitals, and clerical as sistance in various federal, state, county and city offices. NUMBER 49