TEMPLE MARKET Specials Sold Only With Food Order March 14-15-16, 1963 14 oz. Bottle Hunts TOMATO CATSUP 2 Bottles 25C 8 oz. Cotton Floor Mop 39< Maxwell House COFFEE 2 B»-tan$1#15 530 Tubes Colgate TOOTH PASTE 2 Tubes 630 Aunt Jemima Pancake MIX j 3C pound box Cut-Rite WAX PAPER 125 Ft. Roll 251 Waldorf TOILET TISSUE 4 r°Ns 29c Pillsburys 3 Cans BISCUITS 25t SOUTHERN BELLE 2 LBS. OLEO 29c Smoked Hams Lb. PICNICS 37c Fresh Ground 3 Lbs. Hamburger $1.00 Western Round Lb. STEAK 69t End Cut Lb. Pork Chops 47c Homemade SAUSAGE Lb. 49c Fresh Dressed Lb. FRYERS 29c Zebulon Society Happenings Dr. and Mrs. Lee Sedwitz jet today to Spain. From Spain they will go to London. In the two countries the popular Wendell Zebulon Hospital surgeon will do and explain the asthma operation. But there’ll be some pleasure sandwiched in between, with, of course, bull fighting ranking tops I on their agenda. * ' Pvt. Howard Beck, Jr., left Sun day after spending a two-week furlough here with his parents. He is stationed at Fort Sam Hous ton, Texas. / * Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Lowery and daughter visited Cadet Ted Low ery, a student at Fork Union Mil itary Academy in Virginia, during the weekend. * Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beck and children recently visited relatives of Mrs. Beck in Maxton. * R. E. Kitchings has undergone surgery at Duke Hospital for the removal of a chest tumor. His wife was recently a patient at Wendell-Zebulon Hospital but is now at home. Their daughter, Mrs. Gwen Smith of Nashville, Tenn., is now with them. * Policeman and Mrs. L. A. Baker spent Friday in Statesville with their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Wilkinson. Mr. and Mrs. Vaiden Whitley I left Saturday for a two-week va cation in Florida. They are pres ently enjoying the pleasures of Daytona Beach. • Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Sexton spent Sunday afternoon with their granddaughter, Faye Ellington, who is a sophomore at N. C. Wes leyan College in Rocky Mount. On Saturday, the Sextons had their grandchildren, Burt, Joe and Blake of Wilson to spend the day with them. * Mrs. S. G. Flowers says that her son, S. G., Jr., and his family are settled in Formosa. Everything is all right, except daughter-in law, Beverly, has written that the earthquake tremors are rather frightening. However, the family is now getting used to them. * Mr. and Mrs. Leary Davis of Wake Forest College spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Davis. * Mrs. George Tucker and daugh ters are visiting her father in Rich mond. Her father, W. J. Ander son, is ill. * The mother of Dr. Ben Thomas, Mrs. D. D. Thomas, w^s the Mon day guest of her son and his fam ily. She was enroute to her home in Sanford. She spent last week visiting in Rocky Mount. * 1st Sgt. and Mrs. Jeffrey Carter and son, Curtis, were recent visi tors of his mother, Mrs. Urtrice Carter. Accompanying them was the sergeant’s mother-in-law, Mrs. Weber of Fulda, Germany. Mrs. Weber has been with Jeffrey and his wife for a year and will soon leave for her home in Germany. Two-year-old Curtis speaks two languages, German and English. His grandmother Weber speaks no English and she has been con versing with Curtis in German. * Mrs. H. K. McDevitt of New foundland, daughter of Mrs. Ur trice Carter, recently fell and broke her left arm. Mrs. Carter says her daughter is recuperating nicely. Mrs. Carter may visit the McDevitts this summer. She is thinking of accompanying her grandson who attends Pfeiffer Col lege to his Newfoundland home for a visit with her daughter’s family. * Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Bunn and Mr. and Mrs. Arm strong Cannady were Mr. and Mrs. T. Y. Newton of Fayetteville and Mrs. W. Y. Floyd and Miss Linda Newton of Lumberton. * It was quite a night for JoEllen and Rhoe Winchell on February 21. They were guests at a ball given for the governor of Connec | ticut and his wife. Mrs. Winchell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. D. Gill, was very fetching in a yellow ball gown and Rhoe was dashing in his tails as they swirled around the polished dance floor of the mansion. Rhoe is associated with Merrill, Lynch, Fenner and Smith of Hartford. The couple and their two children reside in Cheshire, Conn., but eventually expect to move to Hartford. * Mrs. Bob Miller of Elizabeth City was the overnight guest last Thursday of her sister, Mrs. W. C. Campen and Mr. Campen. * Mr. and Mrs. John Liles of San ford were weekend guests of Mrs. M. B. Chamblee. * Dr. Max Shapiro is eagerly looking forward to October 13. On that day his heir is scheduled to arrive. His pretty wife, the for mer Jev.ell Hood of Zebulon, has just received word that the stork will visit the couple. The Shapiros reside in Los Angeles. * For the past ten years, since the death of John Kemp, and because there are two birthdays during the first two weeks of March, the children of Mr. and Mrs. Kemp get together at Mrs. Kemp’s home here. Last weekend the house (Continued on Page 7) “Finally darkness came. • . . ond we turned on the clear bulbs. As we sat down to supper, Mama could tell whether we had washed our hands and you could see well enough to tell if the bowl was filled with collards or turnip greens. I looked up to the dangling light and said to myself, 'Now we are almost as good as town people.' " That's how a 35-year-old Eastern North Caro lina man remembers the beginning of REA and the first night with lights. Only three out of 100 rural North Carolina homes had electricity then, so you may have a similar memory. 1 t Remember the long years of waiting . . . and the refusals of the existing power companies. And then the decision of rural people to organize and do the job themselves. Today, nearly 98 out 100 rural homes have electricity. They do because of a basic American freedom: The freedom to-organize to provide our selves with a service on a nonprofit basis. This freedom is just as precious as the free dom to organize and invest for the purpose of prof it. Our rural electric cooperatives believe in both freedoms.