;:v 1 I t f 4 I " V 1' " v , it-- i S::vIIiil . ' By beLOIS ANN KORNEGAY, ' Visa Betty , Herring of Kinston . spent the weekend at home with he parents, Mr. and Mrs, Earl Hen . ing.' K i ,' , ; a Mr. and Mrs. Park Holme of near Wallace visited relatives here '' Sunday. : Mr. and Mrs. Jimraie Mosely of v Kinston visited Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Tvndall Sunday afternoon. ' Mrs, Hudson of near Mt uuve has returned to ber home after vis iting her daughter, Mrs. Reuben JBiahop. ( Mrs. Leon Outlaw of Mt Olive and Mrs. Kenneth Westbrook of Charlotte visited Mrs. Ethel Kor negay and Mrs. Jack Grady last Thursday night. Several of the young people of the community have left for Col lege. 1" Mr. and Mrs. Norman Daly of St. John visited Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wallace Sunday. Quite a few from Snow Hill at tended church at Parkes Chapel Greenville Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Kornegay and children visited Mr. and Mrs. Dur--wood Walker of the Maplewood community Sunday., Wallace Drive-In Theatre Wallace, N. C. FrL-Sat SeP. W-M SCCDDA HOO, SCUDDA HAY" June Haver THE BIO CAT" Forrest Tucker - Peggy Ann Garner Saa.-Mon.-Tnes. Sept. 19-20-21 "BEACHHEAD" Tony Curtis Frank Lovejoy WedL-Thars. Sept. zz-zs "CHINA VENTURE" Edmond O'Brien Pen-Lin Drive-in Theatre Wallace, N. C. 3 Jas, Doable Feature Sept. 18 "THE BIG FRAME" Mark Stevens BONO Of OLD WYOMING" LaXue Sept. 1M -CARNIVAL STORY" Ann Baxter Taesv-Wed. Sept. Z1-ZZ "STRANGER WORK A GUN' -i, " Randolph Seat! Thatfe-Fri. -; ", -" H "FLAKE or CALCUTTA" . Denlae Dareel El FALL SEED GROW Arlington Victorgrain Fulgrain OATS BARLEY Abruzzi RYE Atlas WHEAT Hairy VETCH CLOVER Rye GRASS Onion SETS We WU1 Be Gald To Fill Your A. S. C. FARM PURCHASE ORDERS TYNDALL Seed-Feed & Supply Co ,JLiliv Mr. and Mrs. MUtoa Kornegay and children of Weatbrook''s visit, ed in this community Sunday after noon. , i , Mr. and Mrs. Duff Kornegay re cently visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Holmes of the Herr ing's Store community. Mr. W, J. Hinson spent Friday with his sister, Mrs. Alice Smith of Pink Hill Mr. and Mrs. Herman Rouse and children of Willard visited rela tives here Sunday.' Youth Bally A Youth Rally will be held at Snow Hill Fe Will Baptist Church near Scott's Store on Saturday night, Sept. 18 beginning at 7:45 o'clock. The public ij cordially in vited to attend this rally. A good time will be had by all who attend. Ladles Auxiliary The Ladies Auxiliary of the Snow Hill Free Will Baptist Church held their September meeting in the home of Mrs. Ruth Waller on Sat urday afternoon, Sept. 11. The meet ing was called to order by the president, Miss Lorena Waller. Mrs. Norma Reardon, program chairman, had charge of the program. After the program was called and the minutes were read by the Secretary, Mrs. Joyce Tyndall. The treasurers report was given by Mrs. Jane Pow ell . The meeting was adjourned by teeoeooooeeei Danca Theatre Thurs.-Frl. Sept 16-17 Drums Across The River starring Audie Murphy - Walter Brennan Saturday Sept. 18 Carabo Trail starring Randolph Scott Saturday Late Show Play Girl starring Barry Sullivan - Shelly Winters Sunday Sept 19 Lucky Me starring Boris Day - Robert Cam ming! Men-Tees. Sept 2WS1 Gamblers From Natchez starring Rory Calhoun Wed.-ThBTS.-Frt. Sept 22-25-24 j .. Apache tarring Bart 1 . ivastar-Jean Peters ooodoooocoot ttu-Pont Drive-In Theatre Highway 258 - Richlands Road 2 miles out of Kinston ni.-CMit. Sept 17-11 DOUBLE FEATURE Trail Of The Arrow And Terror On A Train San-Mon. Sept 19-M Best Years Of Our Lives Taea.-Wed. Sept 21-U Raiders Of The Seven Seas niam-Frl. Sept 23-24 Hell And High Water tet DOUBLE FEATURE Sept 25 City Of Bad Men And T-Man 90000OOO00OO0000000CO0OO4 . - , 0 o o AIR CONDITIONED A Sunday and Monday O RIVER OF Q Cinemascope & Technicolor 0 with Marilyn Monroe - Robert Mltchum Cartoons 4 . , " Tuesday o PRIDE OF THE with Llayd Bridges - Vera O o Wednesday DOVBLE S BLOOD ON O o who Mocn WHO KILLED O Tharsday and Friday September 22-24 O O THE ROBE (Cinemascow & Color O O with Victor Malnre and Jean SisaaMoa New ' O O : Admission Chlldern JU Adolta JO ' O O Shawe a S:J 7 M and tM T. M. O Qtt : i O Q .'Sataraay - September 28 q q DOUBLE FEATURE Q O THE SIEGE AT RED ft','-.' ' with Van O : SECURITY RISK with Jaha Irdaad repeating the League Benediction, after which the hostess served de Uclous refreshments. , Rose Hill Hews Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Chestnutt and son Billy visited Mrs. Annie Taylor and Miss Charlotte Chest nutt in Magnolia Sunday. Mrs. Annie Scott is visiting her sister, Mrs. Willard Batts of Wal lace. Mrs. W. S. Wells spent last week in Whiteville visiting her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bus ter Powell. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Bland, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Bland, Jr., Amy Bland, III, and Miss Gatherine Bland spent last weekend in Washington, D.C. Mr. and Mr. Claude Fields of Detroit, Mich., visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fields recently. Friends of Mrs. L. O. Scott will be sorry to learn she is a patient at Rex Hospital in Raleigh . Mrs. George Carr underwent sur gery in a Rocky Mount hospital last week but is recovering nicely. Mr. C. C. Moore is seriously ill at his home here. Mr. Moore is abe loved old gentleman of about 95 year of age. Mrs. Lena Scott is visiting Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Scott at Newton Grove. Mr. George Carr and children spent the weekend in Roeky Mt. visiting Mrs. Carr who is a patient in the hospital there. Mr Berry S. Garris of Wilson vis ited friends and relatives here dur ing the weekend. Early Bath And Carey's Rebellion BATHE, N. C.-The great county of Bath, which extended irom i bemarle Sound to the Cape Fear River and from the Atlantic to the Pacific, was chartered in 1696. Bath County included ground now occupied by such cities as Ashe ville, Chattanooga, Memphis, Little Rock. Oklahoma City, both Las Vegas and San Francisco. Midway between New York and Florida, the present town of Bath,, with a population of about 400, is located an a high bluff that separ ates two "creeks" each a half mile wide that converge in front of the town before flowing into Pamlico River a mile away. It is far enough from the ocean to protect boats from the ravages of salt water pests and storms, yet lear enough to make water trans port feasible to and from the Atlan tic seaboard. Jnhn Lawson. English traveler 000000000006 TYILITE DRIVE-IN THEATRE BEULAVHXE, N. C. Box Office Open 1 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK Thnrv-Frt 6ept l- Johnny Dark with Tony Curtis - Piper Laorte iat Doable Feature Sept. IS Gun Belt starring George Montgomery Also The Golden Idol with Johnny Sheffield &un.-Mon.-Tucs. Sept lf-20-21 Garden Of Evil In Cineasaacope with Gary Cooper - Soaaa Hayward and Richard Widmark Wednesday Sept 22 I, The Jury with PrrsUm tuui . .fry Castlt AAOOOOOOOOf WARSAW, N.C o BY REFRIGERATION A September 19-20 O o o NO RETURN o o September 21 Q BLUE GRASS O Miles (color) Cartoons Q n FEATURE September 22 THE MOON q oincaoin jr DOC ROBBIN RIVER (Technicolor) O Johnsm Q o Hillbilly Hit Far:do KELSON KIICO " s The top ten tunes of the week as selected Irom your cards and letters ComplM by NEL 3N KIMG (and MARTY ROBERTS HI yr, Mends and r ilehbors; Wel come from the ,'CKY HILL BILLY HIT PARADE, and your buddies Nelson and Marty. Well . . . looks like Fall's a headln our way in spite of the high temper atures we've been having In most parts of WCKY-land. We Start off with a news note from the Island of lets ... do you know what kind of music is most popular in Hawaii? It isn't hula tunes, you can bet . . . but our good old country music, and the folks you like so well . . . are just as popu lar r-it there In the Islands . . . REX ALLEN Is readying an al bum of kiddie tunes, and Is also set to record some country num bers with EVE SUMMERS . . . sister of Mary Ford . . . PEE WEE KINO is following in the footsteps of EDDY ARNOLD, and getting ready a series of filmed TV shows . . . featuring country and western muslo . . . Starting date Is not yet sure. If you heard rumors that FRNTE TUBE has left tha Grand Ole Opsry . . . taln't so. ERNIE'S Just on his regular vacation, and will ba back on the job some ot tae daj-s . . . ROY ACUFF and his S1IOKEY MOUNTAIN BOYS are flying to Alaska in November, for a five weeks tour of Armed Forces Installations, to entertain Uncle Sam's boys up there in the cold north . . . They'll be back in January . . . Well you're still loyal to the lenders. No changes in the first three . . . two new ones on for the first time . . . Here's how you asked us to play 'em. and historian, perreived duHnu I visit in 1700 that the site had pos- sibilities as a town. In 1705, Lawson 1 and other settlers Incorporates Bath Town, first in the Province of North Carolina. The others were Joel Martin, Simon Alderson and Nicholas Daw, with Thomas Hard ing replacing Lawson shortly there after. Robert Daniel, first Deputy Gov enor of the Province of North Car olina, made Bath the seat of his government in 1704. Edward Hyde, first Governor of the Province of North Carolina, operated from Bath 75 years before New Bern became first capital of the State of North Carolina. Hyde took office in 1712, and as was the custom, the gover nor's home was the seat of the gov ernment, with meetings being held fre"uentlv at plantation homes. Since Bath was not only the only town in the Province but the capi tal as well, many prominent fami lies moved in from other parts. Public buildings and fine homes were erected and Bath became the first official port of entry for the Province in 1715. Manor houses, large land holdings, wealth, culture, finery, racing, fishing, and politics ooooooooooo MOTOR PARK . Drtve-in Theatre PINK HILL, N. C. Saaday Sept 19 Bod Abbott and Lau Cestella Goes To Mars Cartoon Matk-Taea. Sept Zs-tl Capt. John Smith And Pocahontas Anthony Dexter ledy Lawrence Cartoon and Comedy Every Mth Car la FREE Wednesday Only Sept 22 Sea Devils Rock Hudson - Yvonne DeCarlo Cartoon Chapter 1 Sea of Geroa Ime Thursday Only Sept O Laura Dana Andrews . Gene Tierney Cartoon Short Friday and Saturday Sept 24-25 Killer Ape Johnny Welsamaier ALSO Ramrod Joel MoCrea Veronica Lake Cartoon oooooooooooo L',:iiil,-" CENTER THEATRE Mount Olive, N. C gun.-Mao.-TBe. Sept 19-M-tl The High And The Mighty la Clnnnsatiapt with Job Wayne Claire Trevor WeeVTharav Sept 22-22 Phantom Of The Rue Morgue with Karl Tsblden-ratrtcia Medina rrt-Bat Sep! 24-25 Valley Of The Kings arlth Robert Tayter-Eleaaer rarker XAXTt ROBERTS f L I Dont Hurt Anymore (1) Hank Snow 2. One By One (2) K. Wells R. Foley S. Even Tho' (3) j Webb Pierce 4. Good Night Sweetheart Good Night (4) Johnny Jack . Looking Bock To See (S) J. Tubb-G. Hill & This Ole' House ( ) Stuart Hamblen 7. Go Boy, Go (7) Carl Smith 7. Sparkling Brown Eyes (S) Webb Pierce 9. Rose Marie (9) Slim Whitman 10. Hep Cat Baby ) Eddy Arnold Billboard Mag's "Spotllte" Is turned on two of your favorites this week. WEBB PIERCE comes up with "Mora and More" and "You're Not Mine Anymore;" also ROY PRICE with "I Could Love You More" and "What If He Don't Love Yon." And that's the end of the paper for this week. Glad we had this chance to visit. Keep singing, and until next week in this same paper, and every night on the WCKY JAMBOREE and HILL BILLY HIT PARADE where we like to gather 'round with all the friends and neighbors. So long. fe&Otand were the order of the era. Politics and rellgon, however, be- gan to brew discord. Quakers, op- posed to the established Church and to the taking of oaths, had moved in in large numbers. Efforts to have them take the oath of allegiance to Queen Anne met with such resis tance that the effectiveness of the government became jeopardized. Then, during Governor Carey's sec ond term, that began in 1708, Queen Anne's cousin Edward Hyde showed up claiming to have been appointed governor but failing to bring with him documentary evidence. Though many were willing to accept him anyhow, former Governor Carey de fied him. Hyde armed a group of followers and marched on Bath to suppress Carey's rebellion, but met too much opposition and had to withdraw. Thereupon Carey's forc ed marched on Hyde's position on Albemarle Sound, found them too itrong, lost his navy and fled to lrginia. Sent to England for trial, le was acquitted for lack of evi lence of treason. It is also true that many a young .ian makes his way through college ..y working his father. A man is known, not so much by the company he keeps, as the con versation he hands out. ' Wallace Motord? ' ''JteJLii'A.' Farmall. J'4 1 .'. Phonesf 3571 and 3581 .i !f , ' Tha 1954 Amendments to the So cial Security Act have ,not changed tha definition ot fully insured, But. here is a Special provision tor the families of workers who died be 'or September 1, 195Q. In many cases ;he survivors of these deceased jreadwinners could : hot get social jecurlty benefits because the work r had not been under social securi ty'; long enough to be considered fully insured under1 the ' old flaw. With the new law, the worker who iied after 1939 but before Sept 1, 1950 is considered fully insured if he had at least six quarters of work under social security. His survivors, with the exception of a former wife divorced and the dependent widower, may : collect benefits be ginning Sept 1954. No benefits may be collected for months before Sept 1954. The survivor must apply for the benefit and file proof of sup port if it is required, by Sept 195. There is another modification of the requirements for attaining in sured status under the 1954 amend ments. This provision was designed primarily for thl benefit ot people whose jobs will be covered by so cial security for the first time be ginning January 1, 1955, but it may be found to be to the advantage of those workers who have been un der social security 'before 1955. The present requirements to be insured are easy tor most people to meet, but a special alternative has been made for those who' die or retire in the period between January 1, 1955, and October' 1958. This alternative is that when the worker dies or be comes 65 during this time, he will be considered insured if he has at least six quarters of work under social security after 1954. After Oc tober 1958, this provision will no longer be effective. By that time the worker who was first covered in 1955 will be able to meet the same insured requirements as all formerly covered workers. By working under social security, people earn "quarters" of coverage. A quarter of coverage is earned for every three months beginning Jan uary 1, April, July 1, and October 1. To earn a quarter coverage, the worker must have earned at least $50 in cash wages or been credited with $100 in self-employment in come. Four quarters are earned In any calendar year in which the worker has earned up to $4,200 in wages or self-employment or the to tal of both. The self-employed peo ple under social security count their ooooooooooot STAR THEATRE Beulaville. N. C ComfartaUc Belaxina Cle WEEK OF SEPT. 19-tS Sunday and Mooday "DRIVE A CROOKED ROAD" Mickey Keooey . Diaane reatar Taeaday and Wednesday "RED GARTERS" in color with Rosemary Clowney . Jack Carson "STAGE COACH TO MONTGOM ERY" with AUea (Reeky). Lane Tharsday and Friday "GOLDEN MASK" hi eater with Vaa HefHa . Wanda Hendrix Serial Saturday "THE NEBRASKA" in color with Fbil Carey Roberta Haynes Serial Little Rascals camedy. Comedies, Shorts ether night oooeooooooo (Used Tractor 1 FARM ALL "M" t FARM ALL "H" r$$ I FARMALL "A" y $695 1 CUB With Equipment $695 1 SUPER "A" Guaranteed $995 All of the above reconditioned, guaranteed and carry a 90 day war ranty just like a new tractor. Many other tractors, available here. We also have several used Pickups and 1 BKS6. Low mileage, good rubber. Bargain Prices. r , " t Tractors McCormick Farm Machinery - International Trucks . and Refrigeration U ' Inr,,v'rt A 77 AT THE WORLD'S POULTRY CONGRESS in Edinburgh, Scotland,! Dr. Paul D. Harwood, noted parasitologist f Aahland, O stops to; dmirt Joanie Brydon's handsome Buff Orphlngton pet. Dr. Harwood; developed the nltrofuraiane-medicatsd feeds on which 350,000,009 broilers are raised each year. H addressed the Congress on a new nitro furan drag. fnrasoHdone or nf-180, for treating fowl typhoid. Derived from corn cobs ad oathulls, the nltrofurana have Many a set ia haman WALTER ADOLPH BACKLEY Walter Adolph Rackley, age 67, died suddenly Tuesday night at his home in the Dobson Chapel Com munity of Duplin County. Funeral services will be conduct ed this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock from the Ruse Hill Presby terian Church by Rev. Wade H. Allison, pastor assisted by Rev, Julian Motley, pastor of the Rose Hill Baptist Church. Burial fol lowed in the Rose Hill Cemetery. The body lay in state at the Church for one hour prior to funeral ser vice. He is survived by his wife, the former Arlene Williams of the home community, two sons, McClUre Rackley of Newport News, Va., and Felton Rackley of Wallace. Two grand children. One brother J. A. Rackley of Warsaw, two sisters Mrs. Walter Sanderson of Magnolia and Mrs. L. J. Page of Mt Olive. earnincs on a yearly basis. A representative from the Wil mington district office is at the court house in Kenansville on the second and third Tuesdays of each month at 11:00 a. m. rvr Friday and Saturday Deette aesMre laCater witit Van JehssM SIEGE AT RED RIVER i Ernest Tabbs HOLLYWOOD BARN DANCE Monday and Tuesday Ia Solar Starring Taavy Cnrtai JOHNNY DARK Lea Enrol Ceraedy Wednesday and Thursday James Whltasere THEM LJ . Chapter 4 Canadian Mamntica vs. AUmic bmders , pecisilis Implement I Co, "- T ?it if-' It takes little time for the man, who thinks he knows it all to tell how little he really knows. The man who learns from bis own mistakes will be learning ' something new all his life. X ii!!a) r 3 $1095 Wallace, N. C. 1 ' 0 At" ; f. ! 0 p it O 4, Kinston, N. C. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO r 1 ,1 , . " ' , v V J tJ( .ww.,r; -J.,-;, . ...

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