Two (pop SOME TOR) K r K bAMitotvei/vj (» t««r«MeW I Bf B WENDELL Phone Wendell 3697 TODAY and FRIDAY FIGHTING 1. COAST GUARD i _\l tEJMWJC PICTIK News Cartoon Comedy SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE fA «. " C,(£V raw also Hot Lead with Tim Holt SERIAL CARTOON SUNDAY and MONDAY Young People ... Asking So Much of Life.,,Taking So Much of Love! y ParanountpcMMU umuuinT luium wun CLIFT-TAYLOR WINTERS . GEORGE STEVENS' —« A PLACE IN THE SUN m acre bras'*m • ’r-r giorci jtoob <MW»tkrlfcdMM»aM*rr, Ml m mtmum tmbi. * THEODORE DREISER mm NEWS CARTOON TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY California Passage with Forrest Tucker Adele Mara also Starring DICK POWELL Paula RAYMOND CARTOON LIZARD LICK NEWS ITEMS We sincerely hope no one was misled in the correct time of Heph zibah’s Harvest Day It was Wed esday, October 24th, instead of October 27th as printed in last week’s paper. Pastor Joe Roach and family were away Sunday in one of our pastorates preaching the Home coming Sermon at Norlina Baptist Church. The Raleigh Association meets with the Zebulon Baptist Church, October 25th at night and October 26th all day. Homecoming offering received at Hephzibah last Sunday week was $820.00. Thanks are expressed for the giving. The Hubert Liles family express their thanks for the services, and thoughtfulness rendered in every way during his illness in the hos pital and at home. Mr. and Mrs. Westley Pearce of Raleigh, Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Pearce of Wendell, and Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fuller visited Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Gay, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Alford and children were Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hin nant. Mr. and Mrs. Otha O’Neal and daughter of Corinth Holder section visited with them also. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wood and children of Raleigh spent Saturday night with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Wood. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Hocutt visited with them dur ing the weekend. Mr. Ivan Gay, Jr., of State Col lege was home with his mother, Mrs. Stancy Gay for the weekend. We express our sympathy to the family and friends of Mr. Heber Bunn who passed away unexpect edly last week in Boston, Mass. Mr. David Hocutt and son, Da vid Elliott, of the Tabernacle Sec tion were Sunday dinner guests of his daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Har vey Hocutt. Mrs. Jimmy Wootton of Wen dell and Mrs. Flora Gay and Bill of Archer Lodge section were Sun day afternoon visitors of Mrs. Stan cy Gay. Mrs. Herman Wall and children were guests of Mrs. Eva Hobgood a short while Sunday night. Mrs. Banola Johnson of near Lake Wendell and Mrs. Bill Flan nigan of Philadelphia, Pa., were guests of Mrs. Harry Hinnant a short while Sunday night. Tobacco is selling good so now is a good time to sell your crop. Har vesting of corn and potatoes has to come now before the farmer can say he is ready for the bad win ter that is sure to come, according to old proverbs. —Polly M Fuller Banker Vance Brown Wants Your Pennies! A severe shortage of pennies ex ists in the country, according to R. Vance Brown, cashier of the Zebu lon branch of Peoples Bank & Trust Company, who urged the people of this community to hunt up ac cumulated coppers and exchange them for folding money. Already emergency calls have come from Raleigh banks for pen nies. “Bust that piggy bank with a clear conscience,” Vance urged, “because it’s patriotic not to save those pennies.” Raleigh—Greenville Charlotte —Greenville, S. C. The Zebulon Record ••*«r•••*rr m » tr r • * • r » This, That & the Other By Mrs. Theo. B. Davis In an article telling how he has raised a quarter of a billion dollars for charities Eddie Cantor says: “Service is the rent we pay for our room on earth; and I try to be a good tenant.” That fits in nicely with the Rotary motto, “Service above Self.” Both are worth mem orizing—and practicing • With sports-writer John Lardner explaining in the American Maga zine why he prefers for his son not to be an athlete, “with things as they are at present;” with Blair Cherry, formerly head football coach at the University of Texas, writing a long article for the Sat urday Evening Post giving in de tail reasons for quiting his job; with The Very Reverend Hunter Guthrie, president of Georgetown University, announcing that his institution is giving up football; it really seems as if this game is more than ever in the minds of people. But not in away that is at all complimentary. One does not know whether to say football is being debunked or merely de moted. Anyway, the writers agree that alumni of colleges and uni versities have a baneful influence on the sport. Well, there are a good many of us who know how to get along without it. • My grandson, Leary, has a spec ially bad case of poison oak, which led to a most gracious decision by his fourth grade at Wakelon. Leary had been elected “king” of his room in the pre-Halloween contest now raging up there. When he found he would have to miss sev eral days from school, he asked his mother to go tell the teacher, Mrs. Aycock, and the class to choose another in his place, as he would not be able to do any of the work. They sent him word they would work for him. Not for Leary’s sake so much as for their loyalty, I arn hoping that grade wins, or, at least, makes a good rating • Several requests have come in for a brown bread recipe. This one is as easy and simple as any I have ever used, and the bread is very good—if you like brown bread. Measure and mix one cup ful corn meal, one of whole wheat flour and one of plain white flour. Sift with it one teaspeonful salt, one of baking powder and one of soda. Into two cupfuls of butter milk, stir six tablespoonfuls of AtMfeis # - a# - Wakelon Food Mkt. A COMPLETE LINE OF FRUIT CAKE INGREDIENTS AND HALLOWEEN GROCERIES FOR YOUR WEEKEND! Plenty Parking Space in Rear of Store! We De,iver Dial 4781 Don't Worry at All - Call Murray and Wall molasses and six tablespoonfuls brown sugar. Pour this into the dry ingredients, stirring well until a thick batter is formed. Lastly add one cupful seedless raisins and one of chopped nuts. (Leave out nuts, if preferred.) Grease two coffee cans well in side and put half the batter in each. Cover with the can top, which should also be greased. If you have a pressure cooker, place the cans in it and cook for an hour at ten pounds pressure. If you have no pressure cooker, steam the cans in whatever will hold them and has a close-fitting lid; and cook them three hours. No matter which method is used, take off the can lids after the bread is cooked, and dry it in the stove oven for five or ten minutes. Remove the bread from the cans and cool it on a rack. You may note that no shortening is called for. You will not miss it. Eat the bread with butter, cream cheese, or whatever you want — and can get. It is good lightly toasted. And, since it is a good bit of trouble to go to merely for two loaves of bread, I like to make a real job of it and multiply every item in the recipe by three. This gives six loaves, which allows for dividing with the children. My husband says it tastes like plain fruit cake which is not sweet enough; but the rest rally around till not a slice is ever wasted. Wakefield to Have 7957 Harvest Event Wakefield Baptist Church will hold its Annual Harvest Day Sale on Saturday, Oct. 27th, 1951. The sale will begin at 10:00 a. m. A free lunch will be served to the public on the Church grounds promptly at 12:00 o’clock noon. Immediately following lunch the sale will continue until all articles are sold. Auctioneer Clark from Wendell, has promised to be with us. Be sure to be there and take ad vantage of these wonderful bar gains. You will have the oppor tunity to purchase any farm pro duce from chickens to hay, and useful articles for the home that may be used from the kitchen through the parlor. Don’t forget the place and date. Wakefield Baptist Church Saturday, Oct. 27th, 1951. Ferrell Overseas Private First Class Bobby J. Ferrell, son of Mrs. Willie T. Ferrell of Zebulon,, has recently departed Westover Air Force Base, Massachusetts, for an as signment overseas. Friday, October 26, 1951 Classified WASHING: lf interested, see Mrs. Mildred Edwards about your washing and ironing. See Mildred Edwards, Zebulon, N. C. 023,27 p. LOST: Near veneer plant, light red male hog weighing between 1-30 and 210 pounds. Contact W. G. Bunn or Hilliard Greene. Re ward. FOR RENT: 45-acre farm, 7% acre tobacco allotment on shares, good house, road, electricity, convenient to church and schooL Good tobacco and cotton land. See Raymond Glover, Rt 1, Mid dlesex, near Emit. 016.23,26 c. NOTICE: If you are having elec trical troubles of any kind, lamps, irons, pumps, etc., see Ray Jones, licensed electrician, in Wakefield or call 3647. ts FOR SALE: Atlas 66 seed wheat, $3.00 per bushel. Marvin Mas sey, Zebulon, Rt. 1. 09,12,18 FEDERAL LAND BANK FARM LOANS Long Term Low Interest L. M. GOULD Sec.-Treas., Box 529, Smithfield ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA WAKE COUNTY Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of Marshall W. Perry, late of Wake County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 12th Day of October, 1952, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 9th day of October, 1951. Burbon R. Richards, Rt. 4, Zeb ulon, N. C., Administrator. 012,19,26,N2,9,16chg. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA WAKE COUNTY Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of Marshall W. Perry, late of Wake County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 12th Day of October, 1952, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 9th day of October, 1951. Burbon R. Richards, Rt. 4, Zeb ulon, N. C. Administrator. 012,19,26,N2,9,16chg.

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