Friday, June 11, 1918
PILOT NEWS
Mrs. Charlie Bridges of Green
ville, S. C. and boys, and Mrs.
Valmore Jones are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Lonnie Jones for a few
days.
Mrs. Bob Huggins (Amelia) of
Alabama has come to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Pearce to stay
a couple of months.
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Averett of
Norfolk were also visiting them
Mrs. Joe Champion of Norlina
spent a couple of days last week
with Mrs. Waylon Ray.
Mrs. Hester Brantley is in the
hospital with a new baby girl. We
hope she will be home soon.
The Woman’s Club held its
monthly meeting on Thursday af
ternoon in the home of Mrs.
Mack Ray. Delicious refreshments
were served to about 20 of its
members.
Mrs. Ray Todd, Mrs. Ellis Chap
pell, Mrs. Douglas Smith spent
Sunday afternoon with their par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Miley Bunn.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bunn of
Goldsboro visited his mother, Mrs.
B. B. Brantley on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Upchurch
went on Monday to his home in
Lillington to see their relatives
and friends.
Regular Church services will be
held.
—Bonita
We Are Proud of Our
PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT
Over five-thousand customers have ex
pressed their confidence by letting us fill
their prescriptions during our six months
in Zebulon. We feel grateful to all.
Remember — any thing you want, if we do
not have it, we will get it on 2 hour's no
tice. All our drugs, sundries and toiletries
are new and fresh.
We have a complete line of
T T M
Wakelon Drug Company
Telephone 2242
Zebulon, North Carolina
Newest Addition to Zebulon’s Rapid Growth
JACK'S LAUNDRY
Now Ready To Serve Zebulon And Community
We Offer Quality Work At Reasonable Prices
FINISH WORK— priced per piece
ROUGH DRY— 6c per dry pound
DAMP WASH— 5c per dry pound
•
SEE GEORGE BRANNAN, JR., or
PHONE 248 7
FOR PICK-UP SERVICE
•
"Take your wife out of the wash tub—
Let US do your dirty work"
Pleasant Hill News
By Mrs. T. Y. Puryear
We have Sunday School at 10
o’clock and church service at 11
o’clock. B. T. U. is at 7 o’clock and
church service at 5 to 8 every
Sunday evening. The Community
and all that will are corduially in
vited to come.
We had 201 present for Sunday
School. We are sorry Mrs. Bennie
May is ill also Mr. Perry Wood is
ill. We hope they are both soon
well.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Whitaker
of N. J. are visiting their parents
this week, Mr. and Mrs. S. T.
Whitaker and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Robertson.
Mrs. Everette Whitaker and
daughter Dimse of N. J. are spend
this week with her mother, Mrs. E.
W. Hood.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carter of Ral
eigh were visitors of T. Y. Pur
years and J. B. Carters Sunday.
They took supper at the A. O.
Puryears.
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Gay and little
son and daughter and Mrs. Leathy
Killens of Raleigh and Mr. and
Mrs. E. E. Hood of Boonville were
visitors at Mrs. E. W. Hoods
Sunday, also others of the com
munity.
Mrs. A. O. Puryear is under the
doctor’s care again. We hope she
will soon be well.
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Puryear
The Zebulon Record
have moved to Youngsville. He is
barbering there.
Mrs. W. M. Hood is spending
some time with her daughter, Mrs.
Ned Stainback in Virginia.
Miss Lula Page of Elm City is a
house guest at the home of the F.
L. Pages of Zebulon. She attended
tne graduation exercises of the
University of North Carolina with
the Pages Monday night.
Barrie Davis flew to Ranoake
Va., last Thursday to visit the par
ents and family of John Dunn,
who was killed in an airplane
crash last week. He returned Fri
day afternoon.
He Was a Good Boy
(Continued from Page 4)
with Mr. and Mrs. Dunn about
their son and the time that I had
known him.
‘Jackie was a good boy, Bar
rie,” Mr. Dunn would say now and
then. “I don't know why it had to
happen to him.”
I reckon nobody on earth can
tell why a person has to leave
when he does. Someone with far
more wisdom than ours decides
those things.
But this I know. When that
Someone starts counting up every
body’s contribution to the good of
this old world, He’ll find that
He’s on his own. It’s a wonderful feel
ing. He can go places now. And he’ll
keep on going places all his life—as long
as he keeps his sense of independence.
• i'
That’s America’s richest resource
not forest, field or mine, but the spirit
of her people. Ambition, energy, self
reliance are the reasons why individuals
and industries —grow great from
small beginnings.
Take the electric industry—this com
pany, for example. A few practical
dreamers strung the first lines. People
of faith and vision risked their savings.
CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
Declaration of Independence!
Jack Dunn has compiled a better
record in the 26 years that he
lived than many of us will in a
DRY CLEAN OR LAUNDER
SCATTER RUGS ★ BLANKETS
BED QUILTS AM) BED SPREADS
We Close Each Evening: At 7:00 p. m. After 7:00 p. m.
Leave Clothes With Rudolph Liles At Runt’s Pool Room
J. L. Stell Dry Cleaners
J. W. GAY, Mgr. DIAL 3131
i
SATURDAY SPECIALS
CIGARETTES . . carton . . $1.38 inc. tax
White House Vinegar . . V 2 gal. jug . 35c
Kingan's All Meat Frankfurters . lb. . 48c
SILK Self-Rising FLOUR 25 lbs. $2.10
PHILLIPS GROCERY
Two Deliveries Daily Phone 2581
century of living. As Mr. Dunn
said last week, “Jackie was a good
boy.”
Other folks combined skill and hard
work to produce better and better
service —at lower and lower cost
creating more and more jobs —and
carrying the benefits of electric living
to more and more people.
That’s the American way of progress.
Free enterprise, vision and hard work.
They are what built America and the
highest standard of living in the world.
No nation has ever found a satisfac
tory substitute for that combination.
No nation ever will.
• Listen to the Summer Electric Hour FRANKII
CARLE AND HIS ORCHESTRA, every Sunday, 5:30 f.M.,
EDT, CBS.
Page Five