, Bethel
(By Mra. Garland Alphin)
Members of the MYF took a hay
ride Monday evening..
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Outlaw and
children were dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Lamont Kornegay of near
Seven Springs Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Brock and
children of near Mount Olive, Mr.
*na Mrs. Perry Grady and children
aftd Mr. and Mrs. John Graay and
children and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
•Grady and family spent Sunday
•with Mr. and Mrs. J. £. Grady.
> Mr. *nd Mrs. W. G. Sullivan and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Willie
Outlaw and children, and Mr. and
Mrs. Willie Outlaw and children,
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Ivey, Jr.,
and Charles and Kathy spent Sun
day with Air. and Mrs. Garland
Alphin.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Holmes and
Debbie and Mrs. Ed Grady left
Tuesday for a visit with Mr. and
Mra. Wymond Smith in Oklahoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Outlaw
ahd daughters visited Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Cooper in Wilson Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Grady visit
ed Berry Price of the Zion com
munity last Thursday.
Mr. and Airs. Frank Mincey and
son Durwood of Pink Hill spent
last Thursday with Mr. and Mra.
Garland Alphin and Mr. and Airs.
^ Ben Grady.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Grady enter
tained members of their immedi
ate family at a dinner Sunday.
Jimmy Barwick bed a finger cut
off at school last week.
Mrs. Turman Alphin and chil
dren visited relatives in Clinton
last Thursday.'
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Haskins,
Jr., of near Trenton, Mr. and Airs.
N. D. Barwick of Seven Springs,
and Air. and Mrs. James Smith of
the B. F. Grady community visited
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Grady Sunday.
Elwood Cherry of Westbrook’s
Grove visited his mother, Airs.
Mertie Cherry, Tuesday.
Air. and Airs. Pearlie Price and
CS^$e-Mby<a$
Automatic masher
triknmSubnaKc^
\ Water Level <^s
^ Control!
L J. Simmons
children of Hallsville visited rela
tives and friends here Sunday.
Phyllis Outlaw is spending a
few days with Janis Alpnin.
Rones Chapel
(By Mrs. A. H. Cartar)
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Pipkin visited
Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Carter in Wil
son Sunday.
Mr. ahd Mrs. Roland Turner of
Wallace visited Mrs. Nettie Turner
dnd family Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Williamson
of Faison visited relatives in this
community Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Wells and
children visited Mrs. Sadie Joyner
and family of Snow Hill Sunday.
Eveline Bell is visiting Virginia
Carolyn Price near Grantham this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Lem Bell of Cher
ry Point visited Mrs. George Bell
and family Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Bell and
Mrs. Carrie Keel visited Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Price in Goldsboro
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Carter vis
ited Mrs. Harvey Smith near Wil
liams Mill Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Bishop of
Snow Hill visited Mrs. S. D. Hud
son and Mr. and Mrs. Leon Whit
field Sunday.
Outlaw's Bridge
(By Mr*. J. H. Parker)
The Rev. and Mrs. Allan G. Bow
ering from Watertown, N. Y., have
been visiting their son, the Rev.
Vinton B. Bowering and family at
the parsonage. A. G. Bowering oc
cupied the pulpit Sunday morning
and held a Christening service for
his little granddaughter, Dawn
Elaine Bowering.
Hie daily vacation church school
opened Monday morning to con
tinue through Friday, beginning at
>3:30 and closing at 11:30 a.m. each
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jones of
Goldsboro were among visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. Luther Qutlaw
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Mozingo of
Mount Olive spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Jones.
Miss Sallie Outlaw was hostess
to the local bridge club at her
home last Thursday night.
Miss Mabel Lois Cannon, stu
dent at ECC, has returned to her
home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dupree
spent the weekend with relatives
at Vanceboro.
Mrs. Frank Kornegay of Farm
ville visited relatives here1 last
week.
Mrs. James Parker and sons, Miss
Mabel Cannon and Mrs. W. C.
Daughtry and baby of Faison visit
ed their sister, Mrs. William Brin
son, in Rocky Mount Monday.
J. Henry Paricer and Mr. and
Mrs. James Parker attended the
commencement exercises in La
Grange high school Monday night.
Little Miss Lisa Kay Simmons
was the honoree at her birthday
party when her mother, Mrs. Le
roy simmons, entertained her lit
tle friends. Games, ice cream and
cake were enjoyed.
Calypso
(By Melva Martin)
Mrs. S. D. Davis, Sr., spent last
week with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Davis
of Warsaw and Mr. and Mrs. A.
G. Smith of Clinton.
Mr. and Mrs: J. B." Minshew and
son, Lamar, of Wallace visited
here Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs.. Glenn Sloan and
son were weekend visitors with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. A.
Sloan, of Carolina Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Register, Jr.,
and daughters, Cherry and Flame,
of Washington, were Saturday vis
itors with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. T. Register, Sr.
Hervey Kornegay, Jr., of Win
ston-Salem spent the weekend with
his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Junie Strickland
were weekend guests of her sister,
Miss Melba Lancaster, of Rocky
Mount.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J .Sloan re
turned home Sunday after a two
week visit in Jacksonville and
Carolina Beach.
Mr. and Mrs.. James Southerland
of Kinston spent Sunday with Mrs,
Ruth Southerland.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Kennedy of
Beaufort were dinner guests last
Friday night of Mrs. Ruth Souther
land.
Women of the Presbyterian
Church held their birthday party
at the church Tuesday night, spon
sored by Mrs. Paul Grice.
Marion Hargrove of New York
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ben Newman
Sunday.
Bill Waters has returned home
(rom Duke hospital.
Miss Ann Sloan is ~ visiting in
Marshallberg this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lewis and fam
ily spent the weekend in Windy
Hill, S. C.
MAKES A DIFFERENCE
Low Living and high thinking
will produce better citizens than
high living and low thinking.
Snow Hill
(By Beulah Faya Kornegay)
Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Hinson Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Durwood Walker and daughter of
Woodland, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Kor
negay of Albertson, Mrs. Annie
Whitfield and daughters of Seven
Springs and Mrs. Alice Smith of
Grady’s Crossroads.
Miss Mary Herring of Albertson
spent Sunday with Misses Ann and
Faye Kornegay.
Mrs. Jack Grady knd Mrs. Ethel
Kornegay visited relatives in Ken
ansville Monday.
Mrs. Nora Hinson of Goldsboro
is spending the week with her
daugnter, Mrs. Jack Kornegay.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kennedy
of Kinston visited R. C. Kennedy
Sunday.
Corbitt Hill
(By Nr*. L. L. Woavor)
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Price afid
Debby of Goldsboro visited Mrs.
Price’s parents* Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Jackson, last weekend.
Nick Weaver and Don Porter,
who were patients in the Dunn
hospital for treatment of injuries
sustained in a wreck, are at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Preston Stevens of
Durham and Mrs. Lelp F. Weaver
spent last weekend with Mrs. Hat
tie Tart..
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Rose and
Mrs. Tesssie Grady, and children
spent last Sunday in Raleigh with
Mr. and Mrs. Alston Grady.
Mrs. Sherrill Jernigan and son
of Mount Olive visited Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Jackson last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Westbrook,
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Keene and
Mr. and Mrs. James Wise went
deep sea fishing last Saturday.
PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT
Education teaches a student
good marksmanship before he
takes aim at his goal in life.
Dr. H10S.E. Shaver
OPTOMETRIST
Office. 104 S. Center
Mount Olive
Eyes Examined
Glasses Fitted
9 AM. to 5 PM.
(Closed Wod. Afternoon)
DIAL 3892
Two months ago, In the public print, we said
that this looks like Buick’s biggest year—and
we weren’t fooling.
But what has happened—and continues to happen
—is almost beyond belief.
People buy up these stunning new Buicks practi
cally as fast as we get them from the factory. Buick
production—already revised upward several times
—keeps forging ahead to new, highs every month
to meet the mounting demand.
And Buick sales keep soaring higher and higher and
higher— outstripping by far the phenomenal success of
last year—the success that moved Buick into the “Big
Three” of America’s best sellers.
What is it about the ’55 Buicks that folks by the
tyc
f-%,
Local Delivered Prlca of
tho1995Bute* SPECIAL
rtWa
a Pot. t >wmn«
MmM 4t (NKiitratad) i«
OMMI MMlpnwnt, acauorlM,
•IsM and. local tqnt, II any,
additional. Prlcn may vary
sUqfcthf in odloinina communltiot.
Evm tti« factory-lnilollod axtrot
you mev wont arc bargain*, »ucN
mu Moator & O*fro*r«r-$11 JOi
Radio A Antenna-$*1-30.
•am
mm*
hundreds of thousands just won’t do without? It’s
many things.
It’s styling that’s boldly distinctive and fresh as
'tomorrow. It's beauty of line and beauty of interior
decor. It’s a ride that’s level, firm and steady. It’s
a new sweetness of handling. It’s great power
walloping new V8 power of record might.
But above all, it’s a new kind of performance, from
a new kind of automatic transmission that was born
of Sight thinking.
• It’s Variable Pitch Dynaflow *—engineered from
the principle of the modern plane’s switch-pitch
propeller—and what it brings you in the way of
pure thrill, mere words enn’t describe.
Just you drop in on us this very week and tty it.
'That way you can see what a terrific automobile—
and a terrifio buy—the hottest-selling Buipk of all
time really is.
S
•Dynsfkw Drho it ttm&mi Of koaimMsttr, optimal at txtrd cost
on o$k*rStrits, ... *•: ■
- » ( V.- — • • .
\ CAN too SEE • STEE* • STOP SAFELY?
, ‘ . . „ CHECK you* CA«-CHECK ACCIDENTS
* ■ • ;• •
s' \t~'
p'v;u.:
-WHIN MTTf* AUTOMOatlES AM BU11T WICK Witt IVO0 WHU
Enjoy eoMtod, fllforwl air
for 1ms than you think
with Bulek's
4 *i-:+ ■■■ * W
\
f AIRCONDITiONER
u If* • gonulno FrigMalri
TWINJVIOTOR SALES
'tl' I,
- JAMES STREET
''.I'd L te
-
it.£
MOUNT OLIVE, It C. V
-;:;K
Shop Progressive And
Save - Save - Save!!
* * * * *
BLUE PLATE SALAD DRESSING
In 20-oz. Iced Tea Glass, Only - - - -
BLUE PLATE STRAWBERRY PRESERVES
In 20-oz. Iced Tea Glass, Only - - - -
BLUE PLATE STRAWBERRY JELLY
In 20-oz. Iced Tea Glass, Only - - - -
OLD VIRGINIA APPLE SAUCE
One-Po,und Cans, 2 For -------
BLUE SEAL OLEOMARGARINE
Golden Quarters, 2 Lbs. -------
19c
59c
51c
27c
35c
FRESH
Country Eggs
39* doz.
3-LB. CAN
CRISCO
87*
3-LB. CELLO BAG
Tid Bit Rice
KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES
18-oz. "King" Size Box - - -
NO. 2 CAN GREEN BEANS
Cut, Big K Brand, 2 Cans For
WESSON OIL
Quart Bottle.
25c
25c
57c
Treat Your Family To The Tender Taste Of Our Quality Meats!
FRESH GROUND
BEEF, 3 lbs. - *1.00
SLICED
PORK LIVER, lb. -19*
MILK-FED
FRYERS, lb. -
SMOKED
Sausage, 4 lbs. - 95*
FRESH PICNIC
PORK ROAST, lb. 39*
GRADE "A" WESTERN
Chuck Roast, lb. - 47*
WE INVITE YOU TO SHOP IN OUR NEWLY - REMODELED MARKET
FANCY, FRESH VEGETABLES
•r TENDER
2V
■ 25*
CARROTS, 2 for - J9'
CORN, 4 Ears -
LARGE HEADS CRISP '
LETTUCE, 2 for
LB. CELLO BAGS
5-LB. BAG
Fla. Oranges
8-LB. BAG FLORIDA
GRAPEFRUIT
10-LB. BAG
39*
45*
ED HESTER, MANAGER
CENTER STREET, MOUNT OLIVE