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7.: i ; oinf show, CBS
7.1 C . .ia News - ,
8:G0 I. Maing Show. CBS ,
8:23 Carolina Weather ;
8:50 Morning Show, CBS
8;58 Carolina News -". , . r
f :f Carolina, Today " v
1:30 A Tim To Live, NBC "
S:S Hobby Corner
WOO Songi of the Island! '
. 10:30 Nancy Carter's Cook Book
UHO Betty White Show, NBC
11:30 Search tor Tomorrow, CBS i
11:45 Guiding Ught, CBS
3240 Noon News v
r 12:15 Cowboy Corral
12:30 Welcome Traveler. CBS
a lrfOBobert Q. Lewis; CBS
- 1:13 Afternoon Melodies
' 1:30 Good Cooking '
" MOOne Man's family. NBC
SJ3 Golden Windows, NBC
J0 First Love, NBC .
. , 45 Concerning M. Marlowe, NBC
v- JfcW Brighter Day. CBS
8:13 Industry on Parade
&30 On Your Account, CBS
fcOO Pinky Lee Show NBC
' 4J0 Cactus Jim Club
' AOS Charm Cards
1S Sports
8t20 Weather
2S Safety Tips
30 Doug Edwards, CBS
Dick Carter
T:B0 Farm Facts
7:13 Yesterday's Newsreel
T30 Lone Ranger
fcOS Story Theatre
8:30 Ford Theatre, NBC
U( I Led Three Lives
JO Place A Face
1040 Best of Groucho, NBC
30:30 Four Star Playhouse. CBS
11:00 TV Final
11:10 Late Show
31:13 Sign Off
Friday, August CT, 1954
7:00 Morning Show, CBS
7:25 Farm News
7:30 Morning Show, CBS
7:55 Carolina News .
-IkOO Morning Show, CBS
823 Carolina Weather
8:30 Morning Show, CBS
8:39 Carolina News
, 8c00 Carolina Today
30 A Time To Live, NBC.
9M Bobby Corner
SAW Songs of the Islands
3030 Bong's Crossroads
31X9 Betty White Show, NBC
3130 Search For Tomorrow, CBS
11.-W Guiding Light, CBS
3240 Noon News
32:15 Let's Go Fishing
1U0 Welcome Travelers, CBS
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Mr. Farmer
708
in Line to Pay Bills. Deposit your Money and
pay your Bills by Check.
Bankinfr Rprvirps nfferprl
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Bank Your Money With Us
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BANK OF
Make Our Bank
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7
11' .v
6. w
1 J tv Li-t Q. Lewis, CBS
1 ' i CmA Cooking , , '
2.60 One Uan't Family.' NBC
2:13 Golden .Windows. NBC '
Z.sa First Love, NBC 1 '
2:43 Concerning M. Marlowe, NBC
3:00 Brighter Day,' CBS o
3:13 Yesterday's Newsreel ' ' ,
3:30 On Your Account. CBS ;
4:00 Pinky .'Lee Show, NBC . ,
4:30 Cactus- Jim dub(,':-v'V --i'-'-y ,,.
8:00 Riders of the Purple Sage
6:15 Sparti):
:2Q : Weather i' ' ' '
6:35 Safety Tips '
6:30 Doug Edwards. CBS
6:45 Perry Como, CBS
t
7:00 Farm Facts '
7:15 Jewel Box Jamboree ' .
7:30 Topper, CBS
8:00 playhouse of Stars, CBS
8:30 Life With .Elisabeth
0:00 Sports Reel
9:30 Greatest Moments in Sports
9:45 Gadabout Gaddis
0:00 I've Got a Secret, CBS
10:30 Two In Love, CBS
11:00 Rain or Shine
HAS T. V. Finals
11:10: Late Show
Saturday, Angus 28, 1954
10:00 Winky, Dinky and You, CBS
10:30 Wild Bill faicock
11:00 Big Top, CBS
12:00 News
12:15 Farming for Tomorrow
12:30 Lunchconaires
12:45 Dizzy Dean Warmup
12:55 Chicago a Philadelphia
3:30 T. V. Theatre
4:00 Horse Races
5:00 Rocket Rhythm
5:10 Wrestling
6:00 Mr. Wizard, NBC
6:30 Youth Wants to Know, NBC
7:00 Cisco Kid
7:30 Amateur Hour, NBC
8:00 Two for the Money, CBS
8:30 Golden Weed Jamboree
9:00 That's My Boy, CBS
9:30 Private Secretary, NBC
10:00 Life of Riley, NBC
10:30 Big Town, CBS
11:00 TV Final
11:05 Charm Cards
11:15 Late Show
Sunday, August 39, 1954
1:00 Let's Go To College
1:30 Carolina's TV Reporter
1:45 This is your State
2:00 Circuit Rider
3:00 American Forum of the Air
3:30 Kings Cross Roads
4:00 What in the World- CBS
4:30 Youth Takes a Stand CBS
5:00 Now and Then. CBS
5:30 You Are There, CBS
6:00 College of Musical Knowledge
6:30 Play Time, CBS
7:00 Toast of the Town, CBS
8:00 GE Summer Theatre, CBS
8:30 Break The Bank, ABC
9:00 The Web, CBS
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Don't Stand
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It is one of the many
hv our Bank
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NT. OLIVE
Your Bank"
Calypso
If You Like Good Ole Time Music and A Few Laughs Each Morning
To Get Your Day Off To A Good Start THEN TUNE IN WELS
Monday Thru Saturday From Sign On To 7:45 A. M. UNCLE
PETE Will Give You The Time Weather and News.
"UNCLE PETE" EARLY MORNING JAMBOREE
OVER
WELS
IN KINSTON
1010 ON
9:30 Amos and Andy . , ... ,
1000 Soldier Farad
1C.30 Favorite Story
11:00 T. V. Final
11:10 Lte Show J ?
, V - Monday, Augast SO, 1951
7:00 Morning Show, CBS .
7:25 Farm News
7:30 Morning Show, CBS 1
7:55 Carolina News
8:00 Morning Show, CBS "
8:25 Carolina Weather ,'. .. .
,8:30 Morning Show" CBS
8:55 Carolina News
9:00 Garry Moore, CBS
9:45 Birthday Corner
9:15 Carolina Today
9:30 A Time To Live, NBC
10:00 Songs of the Islands
10:30 Big Picture , .
11:00 President Isenhower, CBS
11:30 Search for Tomorrow, CBS
11:45 Guiding Light, CBS
12:00 Noon News
12:15 Cowboy Corral
12:30 Welcome Travelers, CBS
1:00 Robert Q. Lewis, CBS
1:30 Good Cooking
2:00 Greatest Gift, NBC
2:15 Golden Windows, NBC
2:30 One Mans Family
2:43 Concerning M. Marlowe, NBC
3:00 Brighter Day, CBS
3:15 Yesterday's Newsreel
3:30 On Your Account, CBS
4:00 Pinky Lee Show
4:30 Cactus Jim Club
3:25 Rocky Jones, Space Rang
6:00 Show Up
6:15 Sports
6:20 Weather
6:25 Safety Tips
6:30 Doug Edwards, CBS
6:45 !Perry Como
7:00 Farm Facts
7rl5 Grand Piano
7:30 Juniper Junction, USA
8:00 Public Defender, CBS
8:30 Masquerade Party, CBS
9:00 Summer Theatre, CBS
10:00 Inner Sanctum
10:30 Rocky King. DuMont
11:00 Rain or Shine
11:05 T. V. Finals
11:10 Late Show
Tuesday, August 31, 1954
7:00 Morning Show, CBS
7:25 Farm News
7:30 Morning Show, CBS
7:55 Carolina News
8:00 Morning Show. CBS
8:25 Carolina Weather
8:30 Morning Show, CBS
8:55 Carolina New
9:00 Carolina Today
9:30 A Time To Live, NBC
9:45 Hobby Corner
10:00 Songs of the Islands
10:30 Doine Lucas
11:00 Betty White Show NBC
11:30 Search for Tomorrow CBS
11:45 Guiding Light, CBS
12:00 Noon News
12:15 Cowboy Corral
12:30 Welcome Travelers, CBS
1:00 Robert Q. Lewis, CBS
1:30 Good Cooking
2:00 Greatest Gift
2:15 Golden Windows, NBC
2:30 One Mans Family
2:43 Concerning M. Marlowe, NBC
3:00 Brighter Day, CBS
3:15 What's Your Trouble
3:30 On Your Account, CBS
4:00 Pinky Lee Show, NBC
4:30 Cactus Jim Club
6:00 Band of the Day
6:15 Sports
6:20 Weather
6:25 Safety Tips
6:30 Doug Edwards, CBS
6:45 Watching Washington
7:00 Farm Facts
7:15 Jewel Box Jamboree
7:30 Sammy Bland Folk Caravan
7:45 Playhouse 15
8:00 Make Room for Daddy, ABC
8:30 US Steel Hour
9:30 Heart of the City
10:00 Strike it Rich, CBS
10:30 Mr. District Attorney
11:00 TV Final
11:10 Late Show
Small Decline
Is Seen Here In
Cigarette Sales
Fremont merchant', report that
they cannot see any appreciable ae
cline in cigarette sales as a result
of reports that smoking them might
lead to cancer of the lungs.
And what is true in Fremont
seems to be generally true over the
nation.
YOUR DIAL
it
4e
'6-1 '
' yJC-
r , Scaaned
r Nine - Communists Convicted
Nine Philadelphia area Comm'u
nists leaders were foiind guilty of
conspiracy to teach and advocate
violent overthrow of the United
States government by a Jury In the
eastern Pennsylvania U. S. District
Court recently.' -'
The nine Red leaders were charg
ed specifically V with "unlawfully
wilfully and knowingly organizing
and helping to organize, as the
Communist party of the United
States, a society, group and assem
bly of persons who teach and ad
vocate the .overthrow of the Unit
ed States by force and violence."
Judge J. Cullen Ganey deferred
sentencing pending argument for a
new trial, set for August 23.
Defendants face a maximum sen
tence of 5 years and 'a $10,000 fine
each for violation of the Smith,
Act '
The conviction brings to 81 the
national total of convictions tinder
the Smith Act
Reds Flan Setback By Flood
Red China's worst flood In mod
ern history has setback Mao Tze-
tung's five year economic plan, ac
cording to news dispatches a few
davg ago.
The 1954 floods is expected to
compel the Peiping regime to
stretch out its program to industri
alize the country and build up its
military potential.
Mao's embitious plan now is in
its second year.
Greek Tombs Found
According to recent news dis
patches from Paestrum, Italy, Ar
chaeologists have announced that
20 Greek tombs of the Fourth Cen
tury B. C. have been uncovered
near this former Greek colony.
Ceremonies At W and M College
Dr. Alvin Duke Chandler. Presi
dent of William and Mary College,
announced recently the college's
Marchall-Wythe-Blackstone Com
memoration Ceremonies, scheduled
for Saturday, September 25.
Besides serving to inaugurate the
175 anniversary of the establishment
at William and Mary of the nation's
first chair of law in a college or
university, ceremonies will also in
augurate the first chair of taxa
tion at the College and the year
long celebration of the 200th an
niversary of John Marshall's birth.
One of the features of the cel
ebration will be the unveiling of
busts of John Marshall, George
Wythe, and Sir William Blackstone.
Wythe, who taught Marshall at
William and Mary, was the first
college professor of law ia Ameri
ca. As the second oldest law school
m me tngnsn-speaKing worm, im
William and Mary Law School is I
Most of them said they had de
tected no change in cigarette sales
since an American Cancer Society
report reveral week; ago that av
erage cigarette users 5C to 70 years
of age die sooner mainly of heart
This was the situation indicated
recently by checks with tobacco
wholesalers and retailers in more
than a score of major cities over
the nation,
attacks or cancer.
"Smokers seem generally com
placent about it,' said a San Fran
cisco wholesaler. "Tl ey figure why
worry when the hyorogen bomb is
liable to snuff out thtir lives any
how some day."
However, there were some reports
of sales drops, amourting as much
as 25 per cent, along with other signs
some smokers were disturbed. A
change to filter-tipped cigarettes
was a wide trend.
Among 75 sources some of them
representing chains with hundreds
of outlets, 52 of then said cigar
ette sales had remained unchanged.
If reported slumps, usually slight
and seven reported sales increases.
"The scare has just switched them
arnund to filtered cigarettes,' one
wholesaler said. "We also sell more
uiDes than ever before, but there's
no real decline in ciparette sales."
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D.S.,U.jo i
and ricked from Here, There and
t oy J, w lomlinson
antedated only by the Vinerian pro
fessorship at Oxford, established by
Sir William Blackstone. - v
Distinguished legal experts from
throughout -' the English-speaking
world are expected for the cele
bration.'
Foreign Studenta In V. 8.
' Figures Just made public show
that this fall v-ill see a record num
ber of foreign students in American
colleges and universities. When the
fall term opens, an estimated 35,000
scholars from every country in the
world, with the exception of the
Iron Curtain nations, will be study
ing at fifteen hundred American
colleges and universities.
The students will stay at instit
utions throughout the nation for
at least a year. Before they go to the
campuses, however, they will spend
six weeks at special orientations
centers, where they will be briefed
on American culture and customs
and our educational system.
In addition, each student will
spend one week in an American
home to get the "ultimate" touch
of American life.
Papers of Benjamin Franklin
Some private papers of Benjamin
Franklin, including 166 autographed
items and some in Franklin's own
handwriting, have been presented
to the Library of Congress, acc
ording to a recent announcement
issued in Washington.
The papers come from the coll
ection of Wilson F. Harwood, ass
istant director of the National Sci
ence Foundation and a direct des
cendant of Franklin.
New National Monoment
Secretary of the Interior McKay
has announced that the site of his
toric Fort Vancouver, Vancouver,
Washington, has been established
as a national monument. Congress,
in 1948, authorized establishment
of the monument opposite Port
land, Oregon, on the north side of
the Columbia river, to commemor
ate the fort's role as a fur-trading
post and military headquarters in
the settlement and development of
the Pacific Northwest. The site in
cludes about sixty acres.
Fort Vancouver, from 1824 to 1846,
was the site of the stockaded fur-
trading post that served as head
quarters for aU of the Hudson Bay
company's activities from the Rocky
Mountains to the Pacific North
west and the center of the econo
mic, political, social, and cultural
life of the Orgeon Country.
Farm Ceaaos in Oct
A nation wide farm census is to
i ' VVikikAAd
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1V iiLt U-fi I'fU r
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Everywhere - V 4
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begin on October ,1st in the United
States, According to the ' Census
Bureau, some 4500,000 farmers will
be interviewed. Th census will
seek information oh crop acreage,
inventories of livestock and poul
try,' faculties, and equipment It
will also note whether farmers ha
ve television sets, food freezers,
piped running water, phones, and
electricity. '
t i
Calendar Reform
Announcement was made in Rome
recently that the Roman Catholic
church is now prepared to colla
borate with the United Nations
looking to a revision of the calen
dar and would even consider est
ablishing a fixed date for the ob
servance of Easter.
Under the plan that has been
proposed the length f the months
would be adjusted so that the year
would have four equal Quarters.
The last day of the year and, In
leap years, the day after June 30
should be counted as extra days
not belonging to any week or mo
nth, Any particular date would be
on the same day or week each
year- for instance,. January 1st
would always fall on Sunday, "Jan
2nd on Monday and so on.
Efforts at calendar reform have
been made through many centur
ies. The United Nations hat had the
move under consideration since 1947
About 4,000 B. C. the Chaldeans
and Assyrians had calendars, as did
the Egyptians. The Greeks and Rom
ans later devised inproved versions,
following which, in 1582, Pope Gre
gorgy Xlll worked out the calen
dar that is used in most countries
today.
It was not until 1752 that Britain
adopted the Gregorian calendar.
Turkey did not get around to it
until 1927. In 1930, the World Cal
endar. Association began to work
toward an improved version.
"I suppose that's all right" sighed
the farmer, "but honest mister, I'm
going to have a terrible time with
them bees." The Watchman-Examiner.
t "And now, my little man, what
would you like for birthday pre
eent this year?"
"A mouth organ," said his nep
hew promptly, "same as last year."
"What made you like it so much?"
"Mother gave me a dime a week
not to play it" -United Mine Wor
kers Journal.
The government official in charge
of agriculture had instructed the
old farmer to collect his livestock .
of every description and have them
branded. I
N
8T
INVITE THEIR
TOBACCO IN
For Some Good Fun
GRADY -OUTLAW REUNION
mm
In The B. F. Grady Schdbl Gymnasium
Saturday f.'frjfjf
8:30 TTL 12
'The Pine State Playboys' and 'Ur.cle Pete Kiker'
ofRadio Station WELS in Kinstoni Music Courtesy of Kinston To-
bacco Board of Trade. Dance sponsored by The B. F. Grady P. T A.
tVtUiLUUY li
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: at ic:;3 iwi
, WHO, AT
x 99, FINALLY . .
. , ? WITH A .
GOLF i
cMMParttMf?
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W.. Y.
: tiiiiianiajiatinaMi
MONUMENT PRICES 'REDUCED
. In order to reduce our stock of marble and granite monu
ments, we are offering discounts on every monument on our
yard on Newton Grove highway. We are offering as much as
50 DISCOUNT
on .many of our monuments. Every monument it guaranteed.
We will deliver and set them for you. We Invite you to visit
our show yard and let us show you how much you can save.
McLAMB MOIIUMEIIT COMPANY
NEWTON GROVE HIGHWAY
Ob Newtam Grove Highway
' airport on
FARMER FRIENDS
KINSTON THIS SEASON
and Enfertainment
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MUSIC BY
INVIItU-
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FOR,
1 . rri9evc:&weri
tr waz qti :
CLINTON
No. 781. Jost beyond
the left
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