r' f t, 4 - S ! IZzx 7. F. I cncr.zis Glenn Lanier ot Raleigh visited tus parents, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Cnier on Tuesday.. . Mrs. Floy Brown of Beulaville, Mrs. M. H. Quinn and Mrs. Trank 3 in Quinn of Albertson, Mrs. R. G. Quinn and daughter. Peggy Sand tin ot KenansviUe were the guests of fn, O. W. Hudson Sunday ev ening in Chapel Hill,,. ' Mr, and,: Mr. Temple Hill and daughter were' weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hill in Marietta. Michael Miller , was a eek end Cuest of Steve Bartley at the home ( his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bartley of Hubert Classified Ads CLASSIFIED KATES: ef 750. Unless yon have mm aecaont wit as please send 1 ry. stamps, vaney arder, r check wltk ads. , i It CAKES WOODBURY BATH SOAP FOR 49 Cents at Clinic Drug Company in Mount Olive. tfc TOR A BETTER WELL, oaU or write Heater WeU Co. Raleigh, N.C, giving direction . and distance from your Post Office. Monthly payments can be arranged, with no down payment, if applied for before well is drilled." ctf FAIKCLOTH CONSTEVOTION CO. Clinton. N. C. Dragline and Bulldozer Work All Kinds Instant Service Specializing in Pond Construction Call 9185 Night Clinton. N. C. FOR SALE: 78 rpm records, race, hillbilly and popular in lots of 25 records $1.50. Send up your orders, we snail COD, 45 rpm records 60c each used, we have coin operated phonograph and slot pool table, for an location, call us for service, Reynolds Music Company, Phone 2SI-7, 518 Beaman Street, Clinton, icq. Ctf. WHILE IN MT. OLIVE shop Ethel's Shoppe's Big Animal Half-Price ante on summer dresses and sports wear. Come in wtiile selections are complete. '. If O MORE . Of tt WrNUTES IT HOT PLEASED, YOUR 40c BACK at any drug store. Use easy- rTTCH-ME-TTOT to allay the mt eczema, athlete's foot, ring- poison ivy. Insect bites. Feel elief in 15 minutes or your ' back at KENANSVIIXE DRUG CO. ' XeasnsVffle, IV. C. NOW YOU CAN LICK ATHLETE'S FOOT WITH KERATOLYTIC ACTION T-4tLj! a keratolytic fungicide, SIXUGTS OFF the tainted, outer skin. Exposing buried fungi and kills on contact Leaves skin like' baby's. In just pNE HOUR, if not pleased yonr 40e oack at any drug sore. To day at jtenansville Drug Co. 8-19-3T ; 10 Cent Pocket Combs, now 1 cent each at CLINIC DRUG CO. Tn Mt OMhre. ctf. VARH LOANS LONG TERM . LOW INTEREST IFeddral .Land Bank loans are a--vailable'thru Clinton National Farm Loan Association. Contact DeWitt Carr. Secretary-. Treasurer, P. O. Box 148, 'Phone 2262, Clinton, N. C. Mr. Carr is m PC A office in Ken iwuville 'between 11 and 12 o'clock every Tuesday rmormng. ctf. TYPEWRITER-ADDING maciuur repaired. New Royal typewriter) Car every need. Call Goldsboro C91, Wociey Typewriter Exchange 105 1- N. Center Street ff ATiwrmow so & sew shop tm Clinton Mill end mtters end and Novelty Fabrics. Belts and hattoos made same day received, fkftterrick patterns. Zipper 10c. now TO relieve sktn ITCH, iff ts RmorrES. W wstt pleased, yonr 40c back at Itth-Me-Wot has mild to ease Itch in minutes tsBsReradlytie, antiseptic action tha- mtt enter skin to KILI AND TTJNGTJS ON CON TACT. Fine for eesema, ringworm set Hckv ether snrfsce rashes. To xr at Keeaasville Drag Co. ATTUliUN MOTHERS: Childrer Impetigo sores, IsM sores' and rlng wrarm disappear like magic wher vast sue soothing, painless SWISS OINTMENT from Clarks Drug Stare. "Warsaw. sJt-ft-pd. ! VOK 'RENT One 3 room upstairs apartment and one 4 room down stairs apt "Private entrance. Re cently decoraVd. Call Warsaw 446. Card Of Thanks We wish to express our sincere sippreclatioa for ell the expressions C kindnesses shown us in our re- bereavement : Kr. end Mrs. Lee Jackson The burden ef responsibility car ties within itself compensation in a equal amount. - s "Cad" llXIer, News. Adv. EeprcsenUtiTe ) Mr. and Mrs. John George Ken nedy and Bobby L. Kennedy were in New Port Sunday to attend the funeral of chief petty officer, Brad ford Harrington, vY : ?; ;-'"!-: ' ( Mr. and Mrs. Led Williams, Mrs. E. H. Denny, and children' were week end guests of Mt and Mrs. Hay. wood Williams in Columbia, ' S. C. ; Mrs. George Grant of Talahassee, Florida has been spending several weeks with' her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Williams, Miss Mary Alice Gantt was guest of Miss Ur sula Williams last .week. . Sgt Bill Ramsey who has spent the past year in Korea is spending a thirty day furlough with his wife in Beulaville. Mrs. Bob Smith ot Smithiield, Mr. C. P. Sandlin and Mrs. . Caroline Sand'lin of Raleigh were here Tues day to attend the funeral of Mr. J. W. Jackson. t Mrs. H. R. Mount Castle, Talledge, Alabama; Mrs L. M . Woodard, Jr., Eastman, C-a.; Mrs Jeff Newsome, Miss Anne Newsome of Albany, Ga, where guests last week of Mrs. M. M. Thigpen. They were" accom panied by Miss Calesta Thigpen and Mrs. Thigpen to Williamsburg, Va. to see . "Common, 'Glory", and vis ited points of interest in. Peters burg, Richmond, Yorktown and Jamestown. Mrs. C. A. Cattany and Miss Ev elyn Penny of Jacksonville were guests Sunday afternoon of Mrs. Mattie Bradshaw. Mrs. Paul Hunter and son Tim of Warsaw are spending some time with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Kennedy, due to Mrs. Hunter being ill. Lt. and Mrs. Larry Bostic and family of Fort Bragg are spending a week with Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Bostic. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Varney and children of Matewan, Va., have been recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Emory Campbell. Mrs. Campbell accom panied them to Virginia enroute to Majestic, Kentucky to visit her mother, Mrs. Rosa Lewis and ad ditional relatives. Mr. Scott Denny of Georgia was a week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Cottle. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Cottle were guests alos enroute to Raleigh following a trip to points of interest to Florida Little Tony Cottle had spent the week with his grand parents. Mr. S. P. Bostic, Lt. Larry Bostic and son Butch spent Tuesday fish ing at Sneads Ferry and Swansboro. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Bosti cand fam ily, Mr. - and Mrs. Perry Williams and daughter, Gayer Mrs. Elwood uinn and sons, David and Jamey spent Sunday afternoon at Topsail Beach.. Mr. and Mrs. Sharlton Sandlin of Browns Mill, New Jersey have been recent guests' of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Sandlin. , Mr. and Mrs. James Miller ac companied their son, Jimmy, to Morgantpn Sunday where he will attend school. WMS Met Monday Mrs. Orvis Thigpen presided Mon day night when the W. M. S. met for a study of Indonesia. Mrs. J. Macon Brown led the devotional, John 3:1-17. Mrs. Marion Bratcher, program chairman, led the discus sion. Assisting her were Mesdames Arnold Thomas,' Lula Parker. Floy Brown, Orvis Thigpen. Clinton Campbell, Misses Mattie F Kenne dy. Zelma Matthews, Nora and June Miller. The discussion was conduct id by Mrs. E. H. Denny. Refreshments were served in the ijning hall and Layette gifts pre sented to Mrs. Horace Brinson. Honored At Dinner Mrs. Archie Lanier and grand daughter, Agnes Lanier, ,celebrat ed their birthdays with a dinner on August 17 in the home of the form er. The table was centered with a white and pink cake and a delici ous diner was served to Mr. Lanier, Mr and Mrs. York Lanier, Mr. Le on Lanier, Mr. and Mrs. Knotty Smith and son. Art, and Mrs. R. E. Quinn of Raleigh. Frank Horris Honored At Party Mrs F. L. Norris entertained re cently honoring her son, Franlcon his sixth birthday. The twenty guests played games on the lawn. Pat Norris assisted her mother in serving the birthday cake decorat ed like a circus, punch and ice -ream. Bubble gum was given as avors. Frank received a lovely assort nent of gifts. Announce Birth Mr. and, Mrs. ,C, A-., .Miller, Sr. announce the birth of a daughter, Gretchen Brown, August 17 at Par rotta Hospital in Kinston. Mrs. Mil ler la the former Norma Brown of Beulaville Mr and Mrs Ray Kennedy an nounce the birth of a daughter, Jer ry RayAugut,13.. Mrs Kennedy is the former Miss Elva Williams. Dinner GuBh'x A-lc and Mrs. Bailie Albertson of Craig Air, Force Base, Selma, Georgia, were dinner guests Mon day of Mr And Mrs. W. J. Miller. Mrs. ATbertson remained mt Beula ville and will be a member of the Chinquapin school faculty. ' " . ; iv It"' '.' ' Mre;G;liill2r; Hostess To Circle I Mrs, Gordon Miller was hostess to Circle II, Hallsville Presbyterian Women of the Church. Mrs. Herman Miller led the Bible Study from Acts "The Jerusalem 'Council". Mrs. Ottis Miller was in charge ot the "Let's Talk About" period. The host ess served cake, nuts, mints, and punch in the green and white motif. Terry Mr. and Mrs. Arllss Albertson en tertained their daughter, Terry, on her third birthday with a fish fry. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bostic and family, Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds Batts, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Albertson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Williams and family, Mr. and Mrs. Preston Albertson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Albertson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Howard and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Miller and Billy, Mr and Mrs. Jim Albertson, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Albertson and family, Allen Ward Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Winfred Mob iey ahd family. Birthday cake in white and pink. hush puppies, tea and slaw com pleted the serving. Terry received a lovely assortment of gifts Women 01 Church Meet Presbyterian Women of the Halls ville Church met Saturday night with Mrs. Haywood Miller presid ing. "Come Thou Almighty King" was followed by reports and a busi ness meeting. Miss Lois Evans was incharge of the program, "I saw the Church in Africa . Mrs. J. U. Evans. Jr. led the devotional. There were 16 present and Miss Evans pronounced the benediction. Snow Hill News By DeLOlS ANN KORNEGAT Mrs. Preston Bostic and William and Mrs. Josephine Powell ot Dob- son's Chapel spent Wednesday with Mrs. Eethel Kornagey. Mr. and Mrs, ClaudeU Tyndall and children - recently visited Mr. and Mrs. Park Holmes of near Wal lace. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hill and chil dren of Wallace and Mrs. Adline Taylor and baby were among visit ors with Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hill Sunday. Mrs. Mary Edwards and Glenn of Princeton have been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ransom Kor negay. Mrs. Nora Hinson of St. John spent the week end here with her daughter, Mrs. Jack Kornegay. Mr. George Kornegay of Mt. Olive visited relatives here last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Park Holmes and Frances of near Wallace and Mrs. Adelle Peirce of Florida were din ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Tyndall Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wallace and daughter, Mary Franklin, attended the Walker family - reunion at the Cliffs of the Neuse, Sunday.. Rev. W. H. Willis of Kin3ton fil led his regular appointment at inow Hill church Sunday. He and Mrs. Willis and children were din ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ervm Kornegay. Mr. Ervin Kornegay and Mrs. Ar nold Walker have returned to their homes here after .being patients in a Kinston hospital. Mrs. Ethel Kornegay, who has been ill since March, is steadily im proving and can be up some now. Douglas Shiver is home from the Armed Forces. He now. has a posi- 0000000000000000000000004 m m sla i l wiar i . . i , . . w m sir . i v .v a - Style 247' O 248 ' n Saddles eentUrii e relgsi sepresse ea earn A thsy walk yen aboot tn smart shnplicUy audi etter essnfer. Q TT This FaU '54 veraUa emshlMW yew every ate ea a erepe seta, q O la fashleaed ef easy-te-eleasi ssaeeth leather. Brewe ajad wkite , J? O '.er Black and wblt, )w;:r!aj-i xii W O TEAN'S SHOP '2 ' ....... ..' mam . ' 'M roovcocccccbccooooccccQolcocoocd FALL NO BALL FOR HALL thg e race In London, England. Wis "Mil With SAM BYRO SOUTHERN ACCENT Judge Henry Grady told me one day that there was nothing to a man who did not have ail opinion. William T. Polk, distinguished associate editor of the Greensboro Daily News, is a man of opinions and he has placed them between the covers of a splendid book called "Southern Accent". The book is a book ot the South from Uncle Remus to Oak Ridge. Mr. Polk has taken the Soifth apart and reassembled it as it has never been done before. Mr. Polk is a Southerner him self, and admits he wrote the booK out ot love, shame admiration, ex asperation, perplexity and fascina tion. There have been many books ex amining the mind of the SoUthern t. The average writer either over- By Carol tone1 Wonnn'$ Travel Authority Education ts one of the greatest rewards in travel by car. In my nation-wide talks before women's clubs and other organisations, I use such phrases as "college in your ear" and "textbook on wheels," to suggest this value for both young end old. The opening of school each fall always reminds me that occasion al week-end car trips or Tour ettes" open new vistas lor the school child and provide him with a better than - textbook knowledge of the world in which he lives. His learning is - i enriched still more if his parents and teachers are broadened by travel, too. Therefore, I was pleased to learn that, within the last 10 years, more and more school su perintendents and college presi dents are accepting travel as ful filling teacher requirements for professional growth. According to a recent study made at Cornell University, 110 universities and colleges now offer credit for cours es in educational travel. Research by the National Education Associ ation into, teacher personnel prac tices in 4,372 school systems has disclosed a number of interesting , facts. One in five of the systems l studied allows teachers to use edu cational travel in fulfilling re quirements for professional growth. In the cities between 10, 000 and 100,000 population nearly one-third accept educational trav el; in largest cities, about 20 per cent; in cities under 10,000 popu lation, about IS per cent. In another NEA poll of cities over 30,000, travel was found to rank first as a substitute or equiv alent for college credit. ' tion KenansviUe. Mr. and Mrs. Craig Kornegay an nounce the birth of a son, Garry Michael, en August 20, at the Hen-derson-Crumpler Clini dn Mt Olive. Tips on Touring -and lenr sns,y J l . i ' IMIOtir f -Keith Hall lands in front ot bis racing car, hitting a barrier HaU,who was leading the field at the time of the accident, sufft a fractured collarbone. '. i sentimentalizes the South in terms f roses and heroines in crinolines, m tears the poor-folks, to shreds. , Mr. Polk shows his readers his own South, a South without tears or pedantry, the success of the book is understandable. Southern Accent is often hilari ous. When Mr. Polk gives his im-' pression ot the typical modern nov el of the South under the title A Scythe tor Mother, he makes won derful nonsense. When he works over the moonlight and roses school of other years he is just as funny. But the literature of the past and present is just one mirror reflecting the changing attitudes of a proud and interesting people. Perhaps what clarifies the book most is Mr. Polk's conclusion that there are two separate Souths, the old agricultural society with its feudal overtones . and a new, ag gressive, industrialized brand. He understands both and writes of them with a vigor, charnand sympathy that will be hard to resist on either side of the Mason-Dixon line. What the South is doing, think ing, and becoming is unquestionably a matter of great mportance to the whole country and Mr. Plk has unique qualifications to report on all these subjects. His cone usions are valid. They were arrived at through intelligent and affection ate study. The book is like a grand tour of the South. Mr. Polk has broken his Southern Accent into four parts. Part 1 is What Is The South?; Part 2, What Is The South Doing?; Parr 3, What Is the South Thinking? and Part 4, What Is The South Becoming? In a summing up, titled Challenge and Response, Mr. Polk states that under the impact ot new forces the. South will move in new direc tions. It will produce more good and acquire new wealth. He states that some Southerners have learned,' the hard way, to be skeptical of the materialism which ioaoooooo6oooooo:o6oooooociooooooooooooooooooooooorCl o o o to f) o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 6 o o w i ml... iv Sell 1111 ;!:' riiUuC has increasingly fastened on the country since 1885. ' The South is not known as the Bible Belt for nothing,, he says. With all its narrowness, bigotry, hypocrisy and plain toomtoolery in religious matters, it does, again at its best have a fierce attachment to righteousness which is a power in itself and which is not found everywhere. , , He states that the' South which was doing business before the Un ion was may have worth-while in sights into the nature and purpose of the Union it helped form. While some Southerners know very well mat the hallmark of America is freedom, that her symbols are the Liberty Bell and the Statute of Lib erty, and that her machinery for maintaining freedom is the Consti tution, they know also that freedom is not an end in itself but a means whereby each person should have the chance to develop all the excel lence in him, that Americans are not free for nothing, but for some thing to pursue truth, do good, create beauty. Reading Southern Accent Is a pleasant, stimulating and inspiring experience. PRESBYTERIAN JR. COLLEGE - ' MAXTON, N. C AU veterans who are planning to enter night classes -of Presbyterian Junior Col lege for the first time are urged to send in applications to the college and to write the Veterans Admini stration in Winston-Salem request ing certificates authorizing attend ance. This Will permit admission to classes without delay on Monday, September 6, when nght classes be gin at Maxton on the college cam rus and at Lumberton and Fair mont, where classes will meet hi th e high school buildings;. - WITH m SELL WITH JOE; BRYANT. AT 1 2 "v. W " f J -I f. ' K! 'San . " .'..'. ' ,'--' T ' - -.J-'- r- I iAJI alMLLJ liJJI J 11 liil... Ccascci-iivo " The advance' enrollment trend In dicates that the faculties of Matte Business College will be occupied to capacity this fall The Increased demand of secretaries and account ants has swelled the pre-fall enroll ment 20 per cent above normal ac cording to H. W. Miller, president of the 88-year-old institution. "Salaries offered competent sec retaries are exceptional high at this time" Miller .'sal -'"Never, before in the history ot the college have we had so many desirable positions open and waiting for our gradu ates,", he 'continued. ' ' The Motte's president noted that a great many potential stenograph ers and bookkeepers are taking in dustrial'' jobs and consequently the demand for " qualified secretaries and accountants is greater than the supply. Motte's students receive individ ual instruction in addition to the regular classroom work which ac counts for the success of the time- proved training methods employed by the institution. The combination THE OLD HOME TOWN ' HOW COMB tU ONLY t rci 7 i bete4 oss peemrf 7 TWO YEARS rVH EBEM HTOeVs HOPAi THOSfi FBSE-FEED PI50M1SBS STAMO UP BSTTB "THAN HIS CAMPAIGN PBOMISt ; CatwMeat. BRING YOUR NEXT LOAD TO US AND BE SATISFIED 1 In Wrllrtt ess iihmv , S7T A'lWP -i ' t Term S::J. 7 : "I of individual, class, and laboratory : instruction i enables the student, to progress as rapidly as his ability ; ' and application permit. This meth- -od ot instruction makes it possible .. j for the exceptional student to short- -en the length ot time required tof ) qualify and in a like manner, reduce' the cost of training. . " j. -The college is approved by the Veterans' Administration for- the 1 training of veterans. Public Law 348, " 18, ' and -Korean ; Veterans, Public Law 550, ' " J ' - ' ' The management of Motte's Bui-. v. lness College extends to those ln- .; terested in securing a sound busl- -ness training, an Invitation to visit , the' school and discuss their plans ; . of the future, - The office is open ' -from 8 to 4:00 Monday through Fri-4 i r ' day and until noon on Saturday, i If you desire, they will send you a ' ' bulletin outlining the "courses of- . fered, together with other informa tion designed to help you In select-, ?, ; ing the right school to qualify you ; . for the future. Day and night class- - , es will start Tuesday, September 1. - By STANLEY i s vfosu mprri s;vkx( o o e ; o o o o o - o o o o -o: ' f o rv O - - !; O ' Or-' - ., Jvk,.v..iNvl JIU Q :(.( ' f''5' fc H AsWwJti-jf.ltki;;.' TTT) rU :

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