v T 1 f Playhouse Tent THEATRE PINK HILL, i NORTH CAROLINA "The Pick Of The! Best" Frances Langford in rr Bamboo Blonde ' ' SUNDAY, MARCH 30th ; PATRONS NOTE - Due to circum ' stances beyon our control, we I substituted "Lady Luck" last Sun , day for 4Bamboo Blonde", there . fore Sunday, Mar 30ih we will ' play "BAMBOO BLONDfe" MONDAY & TUESDAY ;' Ymi'ra buhhline over with music ' doubling over .jm)T' . with lanoMPr 'i. Aa DAVID BRUC-i5,. CLEA1US CAUMELL 1 . T and inirodiielna .CfKS NITA HUNTER WEDXF?rAY . & Also Serial THURSDAY & FRIDAY , The Tops In Westerns! HFNBV rnwni ; WAUER 8RENNAS IIM HOII 1 CArnr downs VICfOJ! MATUfff . Oifectea 6v JOHN friRfi "Ot AX . WHERE THE LIVING IS LUSTIEST.. , . ;l Produced by SAMUEl G. ENGtt S-J , SATURDAY Under. FJEiliSKIES .' 1 I - A t, REPUBLIC PICTURE LATE SHOW: Tom Tyler in rr LARAMIE KID" PINK HILL HEWS Mr. Matthew Burke was called to Washington, D. C last week be cause of the death of a sister. Howard Smith has returned to school after spending the spring holidays at home here. ; Mesdames R. M. Carr and Lloyd Boney of Wallace were guests of Mrs. J. F. May Friday. Sanford Lee, Jr., of State College is spending the spring holidays at home here. Mrs. J. A. Worley has returned to her work teaching in the Kinston schools after having been ill at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. Rommie Holt re cently announced the birth of a daughter at their home in Atlanta, Ga. Mr. Holt is a former Pink Hill resident. Mrs. Carl Davis is spending some jtime at Elizabeth City in the home of a son. Mr. Lylton Maxwell of Winston Salem spent the week end with his parents here. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Strickland ind chi'dipri of Spring Hope and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Teel of Farm ville were guests of relatives here Friday. Mrs. Te?l befor" her re cent marriage v .; s Mi" ; Ruth Ma mie Smith. Miss Irene Davis, of the school faculty spent the week end at her home in Nasheville, N. C. Mrs. James Broadus has re sumed her work as a teacher in the local school after having been absent for several days because of the illness of her father, Mr. R. K. Noble. Howard Smith visited friends in Raleigh Saturday. . Mrs. Jones Smith was hostess to a circle meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary of the Presbyterian Church at her home Monday even ing. The neW: brick bungalow of Mr. and Mrs. Ashley H. Aldridge, on the Kenansville Highway, is near ing completion and is expected to be ready for occupancy in the near Edward Goodson of Goldsboro Wire Fence Wire Nails Barb Wire Hay Wire Tobacco Trucks Guano Sowers Soy Beans 1 - Horse Wagons 2- Horse Wagons Tobacco Twine Dry Goods & Notions Seeds Of All Kinds W H JONES & CO. "Everything For Farm & Home" IN PINK HILL Rom where I Sam Hackney and the Btisau just Ntanad from a trailer trip round the country. THejr're tired, and glad to It home, bat mighty Impressed with what they saw. As Sam reportsevery section has something different; differ ent way of talking; different tastes ' in food and drink; different laws and customs, fint bigger than aU these differences la the American spirit of tolerance that let as live together in united peace. mOt course,- says 8am, "you nm MfoMrancs from time to Oiy( uNrrtD rATOf i-fwi-? r'" mtr "V was a Pink Hill visitor Friday. . Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Edwards have recently moved into their new home behind the Doctor's office building. The Junior Class of Pink Hill High .'School will entertain the Senior Class at a banquet on March 28th in the evening at Hotel Kin ston, in Kihstea.; : . Haysyill.e News Spring is re&tUx here and the farmers are busy planting corn In this section.' - V!'. Rev; and Mrs. Gilmer Beck of Warsaw were' supper' guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jas King Thursday. The flu is still-raging in our com munity. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Davis, Rev. and Mrs. C. E. Crawford, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul King were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elvind Dix on Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Best visited Mrs. Mattie Williams Sunday. Miss Dorothy Southerland enter tained the YWA of Mt. Olive Bap tist Church Wednesday night in her home here. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Summerlin vis ited Mr. and Mrs. John King Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Best of Fai- son :ipent Sunday evening with Mrs. Annie Kornegay. There, .wer: regular services at the Good Sliep'nerd Catholic Church last Sunday. Mr. Curtis Williams and mother visited Wilkins Williams of Golds boro last Sunday. Mr. John Grady visited relatives in this section Sunday. Among those attending the Mis sionary picture at the Calypso Baptist church Sunday night were Mr. and Mrs. John Pridgen and Mr. and Mrs. Elvind Dixon. Colored Home Dem Club Meets. The Colored Home Demonstra tion Club of the Stanford Commun ity, met at the home of Mrs. Edd Monk. The discussion was on Home Furnishings and Gardening. Plans were also made for the club to send a representative to the State sit ... Jy Joe Marsh. Sam Hackney Reports cn the U.S.A. time. Indiridnals who eriiids a otJbert right to speak bis mtadf enjoy e, glass ef beer; or work aa say trade he chooses. Bat those si the exceptions " sad we're leress tolerant ef theml rrom where X sit, mors of ws ' . ought to make s trip Ilk the Hackneys to reatise. flrsthand how America Is bigger than its . many differences how fotsranes of tfaoee differences is the vary thing that makes us strong. : Home Demonstration Meeting to be held in Raleigh on Mar 29. The members also planned to give husband and wife social in April. ;- ; y : L' ' Mrs, 1 Blackmore demonstrated "Planning Foods for Health'' which she served to the members who de clared it was very delicions. After a number of games the hostess ser ved a delicious course of' jello, salted huts and coca colas. Uncle Sam Says Have you stopped to consider that Mverae-you-go is as important to you as the pay-as-you-go plan, which millions of my nieces and nephews re rediscovering this month as their best friend in meeting Income obligations? When you are signed up on the payroll savings plan or have arranged wilh your bank' Cor regular monthly purchases of V. S. Savings Bonds, you're on an auto matic, easy ''save-as-you-g-o plan which will enable you to meet future personal and family obligations, or business of your own, pay for a new home, travel or education for your children. As a good American, you are paying your mr.vme bill to your Un'-'" r"m ' !i-;n t.v for the war. As a good American, yon also have the opportunity to turn the tables on your Uncle Sam. Investing in V. S. Savings Bonds regularly, your Uncle Sam will pay yon $4 for every $3 in ten years. U.S.T reosury Department K. S. Hardison Of Rose Hill Dies Kinchen- Sidney Hardison, 50, died at his home near Rose Hill on Wednesday afternoon of last week. Funeral services were held at the home Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock, conducted toy the Rev F. Jw. Bain, pastor of the Rose Hill Presbyter ian Church; Burial was in the John son family cemetery near the home Surviving are his wife, the former Eva Sellers of Rose Hill; two small children, Hilda and Donald Hardi aon of the home; three brothers, Fennell Hardison of Teachey, Isom Hardison and Ransom Hardison of Maple Hill; two sisters, Mrs. Tom Hardison of Wilmington and Mrs. Tom Bullock of Verona. Calypso Woman Age 77, Dies Mrs. Lola Swinson, 77, of Calypso died early Saturday afternoon at the Goldsboro Hospital, where she had been a patient since suffering a broken hip in a fall at her home i last Monday.. Funeral services were held Sunday at 4 p. m. at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Henry Dick son, at Calypso, conducted by the Rev..' C. E. Crawford, pastor of the Grade "A" CONCRETE AND CINDER BLOCKS We Can Make Delivery Of Any Size, Anywhere JsfcllLMWH liiimiVliVjmsL P;::m315-2 ''kh'-- -i'T 'iT-'ftTS' s'vA'wf!"'?' ; " ; A jn , r - A Vlf mtch stride to the star of hope jra 5 I find they see themselves there, too, ksQ ' 'uj Porthatstarwiilbeateanty I With the Up that comes from you TrTtrA I BUY EASTER; SEALS. ' Baptist Church, and the Rev. J. M. Smith, pastor of the Presby terian Church. Burial was in the Calypso Cemetery." Surviving are her daughter, and three sons,' Jesse and Jack Swinson of Calypso, and W. D. Swinson of Concord. Mrs. Annie Baker Dies At Magnolia Mrs. Annie D. Baker, 74, widow of Jacob F. Baker, died Monday at her home in Magnolia after an ex tended illness. Funeral services were conducted from the Magnolia Baptist Church Tuesday at 3 p. m. by the Rev. J. B. Sessoms. Inter ment was in the Magnolia Ceme tery. Surviving are three daugh ters, Mrs. E; L. Sykes of Turkey, Mrs. A. J. Register and Mrs. Estelle Lucas, both of Magnolia; one son, Jacob F. Baker, Jr., of Magnolia; 16 grandchildren and five great grandchildren. ' ' Archaeologists Dig lii Oldest M.C. (By Hoke Norrls) The earth of Fort Raleigh Is be ing sifted and studied by the U. S. Park Service in an archaeological survey to authenticate the site of the Sir Walter Raleigh settlement and .determine the nature of the homes the "Lost Colonists" tried to establish on this rim of the New World in 1587. The new diggings are being made on the south end of earth fortifi cations thrown up by the colonists in what might have been their un equal fight with unfriendly Indians The Object in the work is W authen ticate the site of the fortifications and determine the nature of the settlement that surrounded them. Steam Cured V---;M,r. They want to know where the col onists built' their cabins, whether close to the fortifications or rather widely scattered, and something of the fortifications themselves -- whether they were earthen breast- works alone, or consisted of a log blockhouse or something of. the kind. . In the area of the present study I there remain shallow trenches and 1 low mounds, mute evidence of a long-ago struggle for existence Ih a wild, new country. The outline of the fortifications was marked with stones in 1895 by Talcott Williams, who made a survey of the area for the newly formed Roanoke Colony Memorial Association, the predecessor of the Roanoke Historical Association. These markers remain around the monu- ment placed at the site in 1896 to commemorate' the birth of Virginia Dare, the first English child born in the New World. . Williams' reported that the trench around the fort averaged 10 inches in debth and the mounds one foot and three inches in height at their crests. He marked each angle of the fortifications with a stone, making a star-like, outline. The Roanoke Island Historical As sociation, with WPA assistance, constructed a palisade at the site in 1935, approximating the outline of the trenches and mounds. This, with the stokade near the Virginia Dare monument, has been removed. William's report, under the title "The Surroundings and Site of Ral eigh's Colony,", was published in the annual report of the American Historical Association in' 1895., Danoca The best to motion pictures WALLACE, N. r SUNDAY, MAR.- 81 GALLANT BES$ Starring THE HORSE. MONDAY it. TUESDAY, MAR. SI At BIL t' , ' "PURSUED" Starring Teresa Wright, Robert Mitchanv ' WEDNESDAY. APR, 2 4 ' ? ',. ''Jt'-r "FIGHTING FROHTIERSMAirfi(; With Charles Starrette. "DEAD OF ALL STAR CAST. THUBS. & FBI. APB. 8-4 "UIIDERCU.1REIIT Starring Robert Taylor, . - EiAi tiuiAi, Ariu a .. 'TRIGGER 4 , ' With Johnny Mack Brown. OWL SHOW; ft no Gas on Gtc ::::. j - Relivd in B tnlnutei or v v' double your monay bark. s Wtnb tiMw itomMli Mid nutns pati-tt. r'" ' lhi Ian, aour ttomacta md tawibiiyn. Auct . . f prMctib Um UitMt-uttni Mi)(jfw i i r - wmploniltUi nllaf (Hdlclm b UnM In i i t ; Tablftl. No Uxatlf. BU'ni brlbift vmut i llffjr or doubU jour nontf eufc nku Khui . lo m. JSc t lU dniuUM. , : Duplin 1 mij ' i WARSAW i i ' , SUN. - MON. MAR. SMt i u t it h EasjfCosiii 13 Iheatre With Diana' Lynn. Sonny r Tufts anil Barry Fitzgerald. TUBS. APR t rr The notorious Gentleman" 4 With Bex Harrison ji'ir p i ana Lillll rainier. ;N ; WED. APR. 2 DOUBLE FBATUKI 'Hopalong Cassis Returns' With Bill Boyd. 1 v i in t1 Falcon's Adventure I w. m " r ' ' ! I Wltn lom Conway. ; THUBS. i FBI, APB. M The Mighty McGiirlt With Wallace Beery ixvj and Aline McMahon. ! SAT. APB. 5 . ":.::"' " ' .' ' , DOUBLE FEATUBE - "Drillin' River" With Eddie Dean. "MyDogShep", With Tom Neal. . "V'f Theatre t - t 1, ! 4 NIGHTS a u i - Kathcrine Hepburn,' - s . t v I. i . . . a V II r 4 f .4 sy