ANOTHER
GOOD
REASON
TO
‘gfl/*#
WITH OS
Yes, youT svoid the risk of
catching cold during the un
settled winter months when
you BANK BY MAIL with usl
' Mail your deposits at your
convenience from yourdoor
step or nearest mailboxl
Dial
AN 94551
PEOPLES
SANK ^e
AND M
TRUST"
COMPANY
Member F.D.I ,C.‘
gjMiimiuiiiintiRiiiimiiimiiHiiiiitiniiniiiiiimiiHiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiMnmHiiiinmimiuniiiim
I Wakefield News!
i l
| Mrs. Vera B. Rhodes |
simiiMuiiN ifflinniiiiiiiuiiiiil
Week of Prayer will be held
at the church each night at 7:30.
E. A. Rhodes is a patient at
WaKe Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Vera Rhodes spent the
weekend with Mrs. Alice Hood,
caring for her while the lady went
visiting.
Mrs. Clellie Liles, Kay and Phil
visited the Wallace Liles in Balti
more over the weekend. Mrs. Fan
nie Bolton spent the time with
Mrs. Bolton while they were away.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Moore and
three children have moved in the
apartment of Mrs. Annie P. Jones.
We welcome them to our commu
nity and church.
Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Eddins and
Mrs. Lois Young visited Mrs.
Daphne Fuller last Saturday p.m.
When he turned in the drive,
a colored man whamed into the
back of his car doing much dam
age.
Mrs. Bertha Hood spent the
weekend in Zebulon. She came to
see Mother and myself Sunday.
The Wayne Lewises and son, Paul,
came also.
Mrs. Annie Jones visited Mrs.
Vera Rhodes Tuesday.
The club met Wednesday for
the one we missed last week on ac
count of the snow.
Mrs. Helen Jones and Mrs.
Vera Rhodes visited Mrs.
Oma Stallings last Friday p.m.
Mrs. Rhodes went to Collins Hicks’
funeral at 4 at the Pilot Church.
Mrs. David Elks visited her par
ents, the E. A. Rhodes, during the
weekend.
Lt. (jg) H. A. Hodge III, is in
Spain.
The Oscar Phelps family spent
Sunday with the Lonnie Pooles.
Mrs. Maxine Hicks has flu.
Mrs. Maudie Hood visited Mrs.
Alice Hood Monday ajn. and Mrs.
Vera Rhodes.
The T. Y. Puryears visited Mrs.
Alice Hood and Vera Rhodes Mon
day p.m.
Mrs. Helen Jones recently visit
ed Mrs. Pink Williams.
Mrs. D. R. Lucas has been sick.
The Bobby Ferrells are improv
ing at Rex Hospital, Raleigh.
Ferd Breslau and mother-in
law, Mrs. Helen Jones, visited
Mrs. Lorna Ferrell Friday a.m.
Mrs. Vera Rhodes visited Mrs.
T. Y. Puryear Saturday pjn. and
Mrs. Rella Privette that night.
Starched table linens and nap
kins not only look better but resist
soil and stains better.
COLORED NEWS
Mrs. Lizzie Askew
Mrs. Ernestine Smith Cain of
Lincolnville Community of Wake
County, died Friday. Funeral serv
ices were held Tuesday at 4:00
p.m. in Lincolnville AME Church
by the Rev. J. H. Garrett. Burial
will follow in Pleasant Grove
Cemetery, Wendell.
Survivors include her husband,
Walker Cain; her father, Morris
Smith; two brothers, Emmitt and
Huston Smith of New York City.
Jesse Morgan, son of Mrs. Ber
cie Morgan, died Saturday. Funer
al services were held at Pilot Bap
tist Church Wednesday at 2:00
p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Virgil and
Mrs. Wright of Nashville spent
last Sunday afternoon with the
C. E. Askews. '
A Religious Pageant will be
given April 21, at Mt. Zion Holy
Church at 8:00 p.m. The title,
“The Pathway To Glory.”
The WMU of Wake County will
be held with Wakefield Baptist
Church Sunday.
The Ministers’ and Deacons’ Un
ion will convene with Olive
Branch Baptist Church the 5th
Saturday and Sunday in this
month.
Rev. and Mrs. Charles Raiford
and children of Murfreesboro spent
last weekend with Mrs. Ralford’s
parents, the Arthur Perrys.
Mrs. Olave Horton of Rt. 3, Ra
leigh, spent last Sunday afternoon
with her parents, the Arthur Per
rys.
A musical program will be ren
dered the 3rd Sunday night in
March at Wakefield Baptist
Church at 8:00 p.m., sponsored by
the assistant organist, George Per
ry.
Mrs. Mary Jacqueline Perry will
present the WIC girls with two
numbers in the Union Sunday at
Wakefield Baptist Church, repre
senting the Junior Department.
BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cimer
ro of Cary announce the birth of a
son, Mark Edmund, at Rex Hos
pital March 5. Mrs. Cimerro was
formerly Joyce Temple of Zebu
Ion.
Hospital Report
Wendell-Zebulon Hospital of
ficials said this week there were
114 admissions, 62 operations,
eight births and one death during
the month of February. '
Pardon us,
please
while we brag on you!
Yes, YOU, our 383,000 residential customers. ]
Last year CP&L customers used 31 per cent more elec
tricity in their homes than the average for the whole country.
If this can be translated into the jobs you allowed Reddy
to do for you . . . jobs like cooking and water heating, wash
ing and drying, keeping you comfortable and entertained
• . . then you’ve been living above the average.
What’s more, you bought Reddy’s services at a cost per
<vWH that was 22 per cent below the national average.
CP&L is proud of its customers . . . and of its own record
of supplying you plenty of electricity at a cost that is well
below the average for the nation.
(^ CAROLINA POWER A LIGHT COMPANY)
An investor-owned, taxpaying, public utility company