THE ZEBULON RECORD Volume XXVIII. Number 21. • HONOR STUDENT AT ARTILLERY SCHOOL mj»- ■■» y

*i^|si^ | *> National winners of the 1953 4-H Field Crop Awards Program, of which International Harvester Company is donor of awards, hear Peter V. Moulder, executive vice president of the firm, explain the technological and engineering ad vances made in farm machinery since the invention of the original reaper in 1831 by Cyrus McCor mick; and the latest McCormick self-propelled harvester-thresher. Examining some wheat while Theo. Davis Sons, Publishers HONOR STUDENT 7 r ‘ .... Bg Wk WBT i Miss Ernestine Corbett, a senior at Mars Hill Junior College, has been named to the Business Club at the school. Members of this honor club must have attained an A on their major and now lower than a B on any other subject. Miss Corbett was on the Honor Roll both semesters last year. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Corbett of Zebulon. Six-Month Sentence Given in Court Here Thomas Henry Blanton of Kings Mountain met justice as meted out by Judge Irby D. Gill in the Zeb ulon Recorder’s Court last Wednes day. It consisted of two sentences totalling nearly six months on the roads given for convictions of speeding 75 miles per hour and driving after his cheaffeur’s li cense had been revoked. Other cases tried during the last two sessions include: Walter A. Wilkens of Route 1, Selma, was fined $25 and costs for (See COURT, Page 8) looking at the 1831 McCormick reaper model and comparing it with the model of the modern combine on the table, left to right, are: Cornell E. Read, 18, Bay Springs, Miss.; Eddie M. Frazier, 17, Sparta, Ga.; Roy Lee Thomas, 20, Fredonia, Kans.; Mr. Moulder; Harold Seeley, 17, Hubbard, Oreg.; Sonny O’Neill, 19, Ponca City, Okla.; and Charles Lee Rogers, 19, Wake Forest, N. C.