3". ineriB of Ik AttenoUngthe3iinfcr Mrs. May inJCI H ns torTfiursday inclii d Miss Ca irrle ett May and Ml Washington, u. i. ana' surf ! , wiww n C; Mr. full, 5 MmMNaMMIMHl Ion, Miss Naonli Morri! r .(Mjrsoep a ,ua Mlu-rd Mr. ami Mrs. Frank Wiley and veratnaya rt- ealOesta it fluests In the home of Mr. a Mrs. J?ArbWarlffl,,Mentlyi wele Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Mercer ana i tie Miss Anna Gardner.Mr. ana Mrs. W. R. Mercer. Mr. and M: W. M. Moore, jr., Bobby Moore a MrtWKaffe FWreWsUfVonmam, jnM FnnbSft'TPHWinifton. Mr. H Worlev. ftichftWtffi Mr. and Mi ton Rouse. La. Mr. and. Mrs. B. Hw?s.ttirraandaM' u. k. uavenaufcn ana sous, ue and Mercer JLRichlands. special two wTOKSTOOrSe of study it ECU. j HAHHP.lt M ) -boro -soent -the 4th- with, Mrs- Hi trs-.Hok den and their, two cnnaren wno have toeen vaciifln; Ue J. M. Johe? summer ftom atiiMorehead; Mr. and UawJUi' Jones and Mr. and Mr. S. C- Turmjr and sons and Mr, and Mr. James Mills and sons OHVe msu uveu viKauviuug Himcr. Mr. and Mrs. T. O, burner aftd Judv and Marsha and Mrl sad Mrs: GraljawTutne and ycir daugbr tees spent -th 4th-. . h Turner cottage oo Atteql,eacifc iesU at tb J VjmJjhoni6 . at 'hmI r t i-tttluitei I fes- 6k iC'iii- aMW) V"1 da 1 and MrarTTatr' Bo .-i-ingt,CJ'' ...- .., IT .TeWr r A, W. 3r. a-itf Ml-.('atf;Mrs. J.,xr Sapdliq and Sherry of.Beuuvfile visitedLat Sehaven:.and;-Top-ft' . kr' nrf ivft, M.' P! tlTidl Mrs. Jennie Stone of Kinston were iiif pit Mr. ' Mete and MiietJlrtlltht rcer afoiAifei. , Imi vMfrt 1 a recent illness at the- Sie-jSfcjJer dStfgWer? MfstV- MfaiSflMr.rorley, fir;PtB!k HiU r Joornj Rial . HaulLSBWCWlft M:1?? Wa1eylind - Mrs. Jennie Stone' of Klhs,tdhWele 'guests at the borne of Mr. irnffWWs. Jones fimrtH 8nnday.""w, ."'' i Mrs. D. R. Mercer of Fountain is Improving. fiireOTfrlMtagsj it the home of her daughter. Mrs. J. A. Worley ItfWIlPHiWr'lWwwr :HWayT Mr. ariU Mm. W. J. ariU Nirii. VI. J. SllliUl. mi ttage at Carolina Beacn. Mr. ana !s. Charles Nash and daughter Kinston who have been va ca ning there, returned with them. iMessrs. Warren iMaxwer.s and heK near New Bern BMnaay. Mr, and Mrs. Frank filey an totty spent the iweekej "Hfi ttves at Bath. iMr. and Mrs. Ben'T rs; Warren Maw en Max .oalb?-'ijjjB Myra W)fJW6n ralenat id Mis Myra lent several SEVERAL WAITRESSES Experienced preferred but not essential. PULLEY'S ' D DDrrTTC 4 I WE DELIVER for MUMl Hi oFireiafel o o Cleanlinc: fieaulf o wared r acn, S, C Thex abo visited tmoua urooKgreen, .uaraena, .Virgin HaDnh. " l'.'' ' U ' " T&oL. Hugh t. Maxweil,'"aU- l uied, for the. last few, weeks At Silvjvll field. Ate, spent the week .itl (lis parcuu.ai jiuavcu e left Monday for washing- C. where he will spend . the ueiiore returning to wewfouno rid his , permanent station. uzanne and "Maxie" are vt- tier parenU Jn Wllllamston, .'Aubrey Turner, 'and young w,. were guests oi w. ana ohn O'Connor with the U. hi returned to Washington, Monday following a 4-day With Mrs. Worley at me fioine r parent here. He also visit- wim Us parents in Uaar- Hfr rftonnfa ttnrf r(uWfe Belle' of Faison were Lguegtj.oJ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lee 1 Klrs?K M. Sills attended a meet ing of 'presidents of the Presbvter- larfVomen of the church organiza tion 'IH'etd at Marshlburn's beach. fwitiMbike on Thursday. Accom- panyfn her were Mr. Sills, Mr. krVd Mrrank Lee, Linda Lee and DiSlre CBerry oi Faison. Mr-1 alrtd Mrs. Roger Strickland and children of Bailey and Mr. 'arid ;Nfrs? Bab Teel an dson and Mr. Bill' 'Smith of Farmville were guelsti 'relatives here Sunday. " flVfrTarld Mrs. Rommie Holt and two children of Rlrhmor'il. v., ar visiting the Bob Holf f amily and "oihe-'relatives here. ' 19 MisS Pitsy Sue Snith of Calypso hid beetf visiting her grandmother. Mrs. HatHe Uavis. MpVaflinglon Dies Ln Reidsville $MK; Jtahn Watlington, Sr., died 'aCa coftwlication of diseases in a tteidSviii hospital, where she has. spent tD last two week, sometime Friday Jftraeral services were held Hfroaiher.home in Reidsville on Sun dayv-She -.-as the mother of Mr. Joh)u.Watlngton, . Jr., former ap-erator-; j 'Jewelry store in Pink HHi, ahAi husband of the from- ep' J ''.s1 post (Maxwell.- - Scout HI lL-.asfVeek SWlBetrS. Smith and Faison Smith, Jr., auendedjCair We, I rat sr.? W 'e're specialists in renewing old machines, but we don't do so well at fixing operator wno gei nun Irom not being careful . - i ir . . " Power machinery make your farming faster, easier and more profitable. It's Just good business to use a little of that time saved to take care ot vourself. You need only a couple of seconds to think of safety. But it take us have to grow a couple, of ii.,.. t. ik UmI mart en -k V !,.Hrvar.lcngSaf.ly Sutv.y, , yew NBC station. 1 ( nuiS'CNflLr.:i.ns ' V ' SUliS ANO SIUVICI! T. A. TURIIER & CO. PINK HILL, N. C ; . TURIIER TRACTOR aol s-isv: klNSTONlN.C ; imi it mx-lHce A fs T-It " FUNDS ii. w ,4 i ' . i. week, yi'iwsr wilo -went up for the picnic supper and Camp Fire cere' 'many on Saturday .night' were Mr. ! and Mrs. Deaipsay Smith, Robert Smith, Mrs. Sallie Westbrook, Mr. and Mrs.. Faison Smith, Aaron Smith,, Mr., and Mrs. Leroy Sim mons and sod W. Mr.; and Mrs. Lehman William and son Melyin, Bobby and Ronnie Holt, Ben Turn er,.Gu and, JW Johnson,; :' ' .'-Vi. I'f'I'l' i-".,t PiiSchcolCliniC; " Is Held Here yfl ,,. V i- i ' . " " Typhoid, dlptherlar whooping cough, and small pox jraocinauons will be given at L. P. Tyndall's son store in nnit hui at u-w a. m, July 6, 13 and 19. according to an announcement made recently by the Lenoir County Health .Depart ment. 5 -- 4-Hrers Transform Farm Landscapes t Conserve Topsoil American farm landscapes are be ing transformed from straight-ro wed cornfields and checkerboards of other grains to graceful curves. strips and "steps." The transformations is not for scenic effect, but for contour farm ing, strip-crapping and terracing to conserve valuatble topsoil-and water for present and future production of food and fiber on farms through out the nation. . ,, j'.; ;;; Assisting in this vital work are thousands of 4-H cluD memoers who receive training ln the Na tional 441 soil, and water conserv ationaprogram, directed by the Co opera uve Extension Service ln this and 44 other states. It is estimated that since the program's inception in 1944, the 4-H'ers have helped apply conservation practices on more than 1,400,000 acres of farm lands to stop erosion. s Rewards for outstanding records of achieventeht in this program in clude merit medals for county win ners; wrist watches for state final ists over 14 years of age, and $25 U. S. Savings Bonds for those un der 14. Educational trips to the National. 4-H club congress in Chi cago next November are also pro vided by Firestone tor itf section al winners, eight of whom will be selected for national awards of $300 college scholorships. County Extension Agents will fu rnish ifull information regarding this program. i more time than any of new Angers or a new foot, U m Holionai rarm ana noma . Miami County, Ohio. Saturday, & IMPLEMENT CO ,1 ... I v': V, V I h SUMMARY 1.11 tllR TOTAL ffi!STIMATE , ,r TAX LEVY u,rxBT OF REVENUE- ( TO . REQUIREMENT TO BB-, '! BALANCE AVAILABLE BU0GWBT i , '''',,''', hi' .ii.ii . Mrs. .Wallace-- '.'i- , Compliments; GWstaii!!,? Mrs. Joe Wallace entertained in fonmally at her home. -near BF Gra dy Friday evening complim-itary to ',Mr..'n4 Mr. BUI, Walka of Golstboro. who are leaving rtbi week for .their home. . . V -, iir.v hfajcer a lttol, N.-C State graduate, will be connected witii the Boeing Co. of Wichita as elec tronic tester for jet planes. . SF0.1T5 AFIELD . George . Armstrong., Custer be longs to the great company of ad venturers who gave us the West early trail blazers like Kit, Carson and Jim Bridger, and the soldiers who came afterward and wrested it from hc Indians., f? 4 However, he waa far from being the rough -bactawoodsmaa like Car son and JBridger. He was at home in. New York and Washington draw ing rooms as on the frontier: As a hunter he took part in those fabu lous shooting raid on big game. His letters to his wife were filled with accounts of these trips. ; ' Writing of the Army's expedition on the Yellowstone, he said: "I killed and brought Into camp 41 antelope, four ibufalo, four elk, se ven deer also captured alive a wildcat and a porcupine, amiable creatures I still possess." He was an amateur taxidermist and en joyed supplying naturalist societies Custer was born in 1839 at Ne Rumley, Ohio. His father was a far mer and bad Ms heart set on George becoming a minister. But the boy's head was filled with ideas of outdoor sport and dreams oi glory. When he graduated from school at first he tried teaching. Then he secured an appointment at the U. S. Military Academy. -v.V His record there, according to Moran Tudury, one of his blograp ers, was far from impressive. He was lively rather than studious. When he graduated it was without any honors at all. He was in a class of 34. ' But three days alter he left West Point he found himself up' to his neck in the civil war. His first en gagement was a complete rout for the Federal army, but Custer was one of the few men' who disting uished himself by his cool behav ior. Now his rise to fame begins, , For four exciting years he was ln the thick of air the fighting. Once he bad two' horses shot from under . him in 15 minutes. At 24 he was made a brigadier general. When the war ended a lot of heroes dissappeared in the obscurity of civil life. Not Custer. .He was com m sioned lieutenant . colonel and assigned to the i Seventh Cavalry which was being organized for duty ln the West.. It suited him fine, tor it was the one spot left in America that still ottered plenty of oppor tunity for heroes. ;.- i -i ::-.-.. We won't o into the pro's and IL;: 1 j:j ; , DUPUN coujnj .r '-'f; ', aiSAfif' : , v' ,(i . .-a Jr. I Kenansville, North Carolina. OF AI!!!UAL DUDC-ET JTTTiV-1 r-TflS V.-TO-JITNE 30.-1952- ESTIMATE , ' i TOTAt AMOUNT OF' '!-!'' OF i L UNOOLLECTIDLE TAX LEVY ' ' .-V-!- M In medieval vmsohly ' HOBlOTy WWS PRIVHHSES. " ''' ' TO EAT 1ETTUC&. V ' G7uc cidct EKIAI INM. OF WHtCH THERE IS A RECORCVtSTAEBHp TO SERVE MEALS TO 5EAFARIN MEN WHO WERE IN LONCON WITH " NO TIME TO EAT HOME. v; m.JJLtMf? fit It "i ' Kjr ns,sut ft frjj I I. WI Will PAY $5.00 FOX SACH STXANCS 1000 FACT SUSMITTIO AMD 0SEO. dDDBtSST WOULD OP FOOD. 104 East 40th Street MWYORK. NX con's of his military- defeat at the Little Bie Harm. He was the1 only one of the 211 dead cavalrymen who had been left un scalped and unmuti lated by the Sioux asigmox tfieir respect for him. So instead of thin king of it as disaster, let's remem ber it as the last gallant stand of a superb. American fighting man. Tree farmers- in 30 states havel certified their thnberlands for per- nanent rarest growtn ana use- under the American Tree Farm Sys tern. ' America' oldest cultivated grape Office AND DESKS, CHAIRS, FILING CABJNETS r.: . LEDGERS, BINDERS, SHEETS and INDEX John II. Carter Company x KINSTON, N. C From In Pink Hill ESTIMATE tfi . V iff ESTIMATE OF PROPERTY . VALUATION, "-1 1 r-r-YiTO" AMP . fel '. K3 PARTIES. COLORED' At-Jv' ,; THE. WAV THKOUSH. THEY CAM BE SLICED OR SfcEWEeEO , , Ot4 TOOTHPICKS-. t, ( , 3 SALA0S PARTV PRETTY By PECOeAr INO WITH REAL MMONNAlS.e.mK.tl' TMKOUOH A PUVSTKV lUBt. rum inc intkF WITH RIBBONS OP REAL MAYONNAISE OR CBSSOWM ITTOMAVCB IHTEPESTINS OfftlSri vine; beilieved tohave- been- planted by The. Lost colony auring- iaie in the 15th century is Mother Vine yard on Roanoke Island, N. C. ( New Grooming Program Popular Among 4-H Girls A brand new 4-H activity that is 'meeting with widespread popularity Supplies EQUIPMENT II ;;f.r--' Sml0 fA ". Al I ESTIMATS OF. ,J. TAX RATS! 1 - vi-ON WOO. VALUATION - . TAX RATE ; O FLAST , PRECEDING . . . LEVY 1 ..-K I ' f 1 ) . ilO: : 1 ' f 'Wiii ', pr- ''". :' ' ' ! L. Nuuie, dn x;tor, Itatioiiai I om uiittee on Boys and Girls Club Work.,-,;.-';.'-',:, ,V ;';'v" ,"N0tWlthStu viU"! thst t; '3 1I'0- gram was fiiit t.i'ere - niy two months ago, a majority ot the states already haye .accepteiL-.tt,"- Jicible SalUh' . involves cleanliness and neatness, Improves appearance, and thus con tributes to good health, as to look better IS o .ieei, ueuei. itvis a .Inn aaWAM H fMl fiscal auu w - -" . poise and confidence ln teen - age girls." , -';,.- A .Incentives for 'outstanding achievement in activities related to better grooming, $300 college sch olarships and .educational trips to the National '4-H club congress in Chicago next November, for . two top ranking girls, are provided by the Tonl Home Permanent Com pany. , V , isaon accepting -state may sunmu Turner & Turner "We're Known By The Service We Give" 4,wmu, Phone 2838 ',. Mrs. Christine williams - Office Mgr.''! t ' L. C. Turner, Jr. TOBACCO STICKS Toxaphene Cotton Dust $13.75 Per 100 Lbs. . ..... ... ., . 4-Ply Riverside Tobacco Twine 5Lb. Package $4.75 : . Galvanized Tin " Holl 1 ' i $24.50 , i . , f .Tf' Hardware rnHfCH M ' V -r.f 7 HARVEST your ....by sowing the seeds r ty. A savings account lated funds, earned in farm Joans. Come ' ' ' ' j 'i; ' I - . ' J i t . v ..cn- u.e rec njpe the Fua liiformat un wjJ be furnish ed by County Extension Agents. , ,T ' ' Proof -I Precision It JC , , Bunt , 'r - - ; AIR-SEAL ' . " " Manufactured by . ... SMITH VAULT CO. , , . . KINSTON Consult Your Local "v f ,' Funeral Director . ' , Pink Hill, N. C. . v f i ft" T. J. Turner $11.95 f H Per 1,000 Department in. ; ol i sion workers 's ' "iUi 1 I. .10 i winnt Kinston ' 8R WW' y own FUTURE of FINANCIAL securi- here means accumu- interest We, specialize in today ! Avi-) , J ." w- ? v h ,H ' i ' K, I. is i , V ' ' t4. 4 ' 0 (hnis COMMISSIONS ON COLLECTIONS' f .., TAX LiEVX If- lU-i.J ff'. .1 mn ' . ; ..I inn If t t To a standard, IJetToaPrice" -AND DISCOUNT" 1 -.. 1 General Fund . , or, ec. m -J alth H miit' ii I me Agen i . id Coimiy Accouiiiant ' I a "r: OA A and ADC :'. : a. ,t'. t. i). - , ! ''t Fprvlce 45 .10 .09 .12 .05 .26 .01 .15 1 .10 .08 1-2 .10 1-2 .04 1-2 .ill' liu ,r:j.J5v i 17 A, d. )233 4'S fl 14 4'M) ( ) 63 572 71 .. J ! 1(1 1 l ! I ' 118 675 63 it" ) 00' ' . i '71 r 114 750 00 12 750 00 127 500 00 25 000 000 -?5 r-i r-1 S"5 13 fi ' 1 C8' ) o "I'M" 3T1 i

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