Newspapers / Zebulon Record (Zebulon, N.C.) / July 13, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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I iwZEBULON RECORD VOLUME 36. NUMBER 23. ZEBULON. N. C., JULY 13. 1961 Hallelujah! Baptists Have Pastor DAVID DANIEL Puritans Sponsor Donkey Baseball Wakelon Ruritan Club is spon soring a donkey baseball game Friday night, July 14, at 8 o'clock, according to Ruritan member C. V. Tart. The game will be played on Wakelon School athletic field. Proceeds from the game will be used by the club to carry out club projects. The Ruritans sponsor a Little League softball team, a Cub Scout Pack, and have been helping landscape the Wendell-Zebulon Hospital grounds. Any person desiring to play the game will be given an opportun ity. Admission will be 75 cents for adults and 35 cents for children. Methodist Youth Week Successful The Youth Week at the Metho dist Church which began on Sun day started off “with a bang” according to reports from the young people participating. By Monday night 44 persons were present for the youth activities held nightly through Friday, July 14. Led by the Duke Football Cap tain Jack Wilson and Divinity stu dent Jerry Blevins of . Akron, Ohio, the group will be led in an unusual discussion tonight (Thurs day) on Vocation and Education. The leaders will construct a town and show how step by step voca tion and education must go hand in hand. The session begins to night at 7:30 p.m. On Friday evening, the group will gather for supper at 6:45 p.m. A request period will follow when “The Dukes”, as Jerry and Jack call themselves, will play and sing (Continued on Page 4) Near Tragedy at Swimming Pool; Parents Cautioned by Life Guards A near tragedy occurred last week in the swimming pool here when a youngster almost drowned. According to chief life guard | Carl Hull, Jimmy Snell, about 12, ! almost lost hi? life in the deep ■ end of the pool. Hull attributed the near drown ing to the fact that Jimmy could not swim. Hull said the youngster was in the deep end of the pool, which is 10 feet deep. The lad had “flip- j pers" on his feet. These rubber1 flippers helped to keep him up. But when they came off, he had no protection. Jimmy was rescued by Gene Mangum, and Hull cited Gene as a very “brave and courageous boy.” After Jimmy was pulled from the pool, Hull administered arti ficial respiration. He said Jimmy had very little water in his lungs. Jimmy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Haywood Snell and the (Continued on Page 5) MASONIC NOTICE An emergent communication of Zebulon Masonic Lodge will be held Tuesday, July 18, at 7:30 o’ clock for work in the first degree, according to W. M. Sutton, Wor shipful Master. All Masons are invited to attend. Sunday morning the congrega tion of Zebulon Baptist Church voted unanimously to call the Rev. David Eson Daniel. The church has been without a minister since the resignation of the Rev. Arnold Smith last September. The Rev. Mr. Daniel, who is to arrive today (Thursday) with his family, was born September 13, 1936, in Gaffney, South Carolina. He is a graduate of Gaffney High School and received his bachelor of arts degree from Furman Uni versity in 1956 and a bachelor of divinity degree from Croser Theo logical Seminary in 1961. He has served as assistant pas tor of the Methodist Church of West Chester, Pa., and student as sistant to the pastor of Upland Baptist Church, Upland, Fa. At Croser he carried the highest grade average of any member of his class through each year of his work there and was recognized as one of the two outstanding men of his class. The Rev. Mr. Daniel was mar ried in February, 1958, to the former Ivor Gayle Blanton. Mrs. Daniel has had two years of col lege studies, one at Furman Uni (Continued on Page 7) EDWARD C. LEHMAN . . . with Mark, 3 Hopkins Pastor Gets Study Grant The Rev. Edward C. Lehman, Jr., pastor of Hopkins Chapel Baptist Church, has been awarded a fellowship for graduate study in the sociology of religion at the University of, Mississippi. The grant is valued at $17,000, and will cover a three year period. The award was made recently by the Graduate Division of the National Defense Fellowship Foundation in Washington, D. C. The Founda tion will pay all of the Rev. Mr. Lehman’s fees at the University and will give him an annual stipend of $3,400. He is a native of Rhode Island and is married and is the father of two children. LIONS CLUB OFFICERS FOR 1901-62—F. Thomas Scarborough, center seated, is the new president of Zehulon Lions Club. He succeeds Thurman Hepler. To the left of Scarborough is Crafton Hudson, secretary; to the right, Milton (Pete) Bryant, second vice president. Left to right, standing, Charles Hawkins, director; Hardin Hinton, tailtwistcr; Charles Alexander, third vice president; Thurman Hepler, past president and director; and Armstrong Cannudy, directoi. \ Zehulon Lions President's Ambition Was to Be Good, Forceful Lawyer Picture Mr. Typical Lion as an American openly dedicated to patriotism, a business executive with an income of around $10,000, a husband and a father, and— most important—a gentleman, and you have Frank Thomas Scar borough. Scarborough is the newly elect ed president of Zebulon Lions Club. This dedicated Lion in his fraternal and daily life exhibits the four cardinal principles of brotherly love, justice, charity and fidelity. The genial, even-tempered new MARION FARMER She puts 'em to sleep Marian Fanner can put you to sleep. Not because of herself, for she is a charming, pleasant, intel ligent and personable young, wo man. But professionally, that is. Miss Farmer is the anesthetist for Wendell-Zebulon Hospital. She is on call 24 hours a day, and finds the job “extremely challenging.” Before she puts the patient into the dreamless sleep, she said, she seeks to explain to him the pro cedures that will take place, and what he may expect. “One of the greatest things is trying to overcome the fear a pa tient gets,” she said. “Many of them have never undergone an operation and they engender a terrible fright or fear. I believe if they understand what is going to take place, some of this fear is al leviated.” Following an operation, she checks the patient, making ob servations of his condition. She has the patient’s interest very much at heart. She could not recall her first patient whom she put to sleep. Patients who are obese are harder 1 to anesthesize than the leaner ones, she remarked. When she has a free moment she likes to do lazy fishing, play tennis, attend plays, participate in sports merely as a spectator, and read. Most of her reading is confined to anesthesia journals.' She came to Wendeil-Zebulon Hospital June 12. She has an a partment in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Campen. Miss Farmer is a native of Lansing, a small town in Ashe County. She was graduated from Lansing High School and got her K. in. irom jonnsion memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Va. Later she graduated from Duke Hospital School of Anesthesia. Why did she become an anes thetist? “It seemed like an inter esting field,” she said. And she has not changed her mind. She worked at Watts Hospital in Durham and was the chief anes thetist of Montgomery Memorial Hospital in Troy before coming here. Cancer Society Director Is Woman Of Many Talents and Attributes MRS. AARON C. LOWERY Mrs. Dorothy Winstead Lowery is a new member of the board of directors of the local Cancer So ciety, it was announced by Wake Cancer Society officials in Raleigh last week. Mrs Lowery and her husband, Aaron, a Zebulon insurance exe cutive, were awarded a citation for their work in the recent Can cer Crusade in Zebulon. The new director “feels very humble at being made a director,” and will serve to the best of her ability, she said. She cited that the closeness of cancer in her own and her hus band’s families and those of her friends has made her more aware of the dread disease and the rav aging things it can do to body, mind, and spirit. The loan closet system, which is in its formative stages, for sup (Continued on Page 5) president of the Lions said the main project of his tenure will be to see that as much of the re maining indebtedness of the building is cleared. He said ap proximately half of the indebted ness had been paid. He also plans to see that the committees function actively and properly. He believes that ef ficiently operating committees make a smooth running club. There will be the usual money raising projects: light bulb sales, broom sales, Kleenex sales and candy sales. These projects have put many a dollar in the Lions’ treasury kitty. But dollars are no measure of eye sights restored by means of operations or glasses, fulfilled scholars, joy and laughter which the Lions have made possible with their charitable programs. Scarborough is justly proud of what the Lions have done—local ly, State-wide, and nationally. Scarborough said, “A Lion is a patriotic American citizen, high (Continued on Page 4)
Zebulon Record (Zebulon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 13, 1961, edition 1
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