Farmer's Market . . . is the place to buy. You don't have to spend your money with a mail order house. Look on the classified ad page of The Index. GATES COUNTY INDEX The Only Newspaper Published °o County The Home Folks . . . are featured in every issue of The Index. You can't buy another paper that can make this boast about Gates County. Volume 21. No. 45 One of the Nation’s "GREATER WEEKLIES” Gatesville, N. C.. Thursday, July 7, 10c per copy i>. r Meekms. Dare County publisher. And like the. proverbial flea, he was nowhere to be found, but 1 did contact- his son, Francis, who is very happily married to an Ahoskie girl and has two fine children. He informed me that the last ferry across tin inlet left at 7 and it was then 7:15, He advised us to attend the 15th ope mg of the Host Colony, soend the night in Mariteo where a room was unavailable and catch the 5 a. m. ferry across the inlet. Francis was sick in bed with a virus, but said he would call friend Avcock Brown and get tickets to the performance. So Dale and I tried to find a room and did find one with two beds for $9. We figured we would be able to sleep about three hours and that would be S3 per hour so we decided to sleep in the car if it became necessary. Anyway we went on to the Lost Colony box oftice and informed the two ladies in attendance that Brown was ! supposed to have reserved us some tickets. He hadn't done so as Francis had been unable to lo cate him by phone, but when I informed them of my identity, one >1 the ladies spoke up and de clared she read my scribbling each week with a great deal of pleasure and I could get all the tickets I wanted. (Newspaper people never have any money, so they are allowed to attend every thing free.) Then I mentioned : Francis, and the other lady said :t had called them about me and , -o they gave us reserved seats | no incidentally we were seated in the center down front and one seat from Paul Greene and Chair man of the Highway Commission A. H. Graham, who were the featured speakers at the opening | if the performance. The show was the best I have ever seen it and I have atte ded it a number of times including the first show in 1937. The gerfor i mance Friday ngiht was the apen ! ng of the 15th season which is ( anger than any other out-dool ' how in the country, has managed to stay in business. At intermission I had a short hat with Aycock Brown, who makes most of the pictures ot See HATTERAS. Page 4 YOUNG FARMER—Douglas Freeman, Jr., of Gates, and a two year member of the Gatesville Junior 4-H Club, is shown here in his garden with a large bucket of freshly dug Irish potatoes. Douglas. 12, is carrying the project for the second year and has one of the finest displays of growing vegetables you’ll see. He has 16 different vegetables planted and as they are gathered for home use he keeps a record of how’ much of each. Eleven boys have garden projects. Strange as il may seem for a youngster of his age, Douglas actually likes to work and every day spends some time in fighting the weeds and grass but is rewarded with an ample harvest. (Photo by John Artz.) Miss Taylor Dies Sudden In Hospital j Eure.—Miss Magdalene Taylor, | 42, died suddenly last Monday at j 7:35 p. m. in the Roanoke-Chowan ! Hospital. She was injured in an ] auto wreck on June 25 near Ahos ; kie and had been in the hospital i since that time. Hospital Authori | ties said she had been doing well as far as could be determined up I to the time of her death. She was j admitted to the hospital with rib j fractures and facial lacerations j after a wreck between cars driven i by Frank H. Britton of Aulander I was in collision with one driven by Joseph R. Cherry of Norfolk. She was an employee of Plant ers National Bank and Trust Com pany and was a native of Eure. It was announced by hospital ! authorities that Miss Taylor was | apparently doing well until late j Monday when she suddenly be came much worse and died from a ; brain heVnorhage. i Funeral services will be con ducted Wednesday at Cool Spring ■ Baptist Church. Rev. K. E. Bry I ant of Ahoskie and pastor of the | church will conduct the services j assisted by Rev. A. J. Eure of j Eure. Burial will be in the church | cemetery. Miss Taylor was a life mem : ber of Cool Spring Baptist Church j and a Sunday school teacher. She j is survived by her parents, James ! R. and Margaret Ella Taylor of i Eure; two brothers, S. T. Taylor j of Newport News and James E. I Taylor of Eure; one sister, Mrs. Cam Stallings of Eure. Alton Briscoe Serving Army In Hawaii Twenty-fifth Div., Hawaii.— Army Pvt. Alton R. Brisco, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Bris coe, Eure, recently arrived in Hawaii and is now a member of the 25th Infanty Division. The “Tropic Lightning” di vision is continuing its post-truce training program using valuable experience gained in Korea. Private Brisco is a rifleman in the division. He entered the Army in January, 1955, and received basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C. Brisco is a graduate ol' Gatesville High School. Coast Line Wins National Safety Council Award The Atlantic Coast Line Rail road has received notice that it had won the Railroad Employees’ National Safety Award of the National Safety Council for 1954. Six Class 1 railroads, which today were named group winners of the Railroad Employee’s Na tional Safety Award of the Na tional Safety Council, had a 1954 employee casualty rate of 53 per cent less than the aver age rate for all Class 1 rail roads. In 1954 the combined rate of employees killed and injured per million man-hours worked was 3.22 for the six winners, as com pared with a rate of 6.88 for all Class 1 railroads. (Class 1 rail roads are those whose operating revenues exceed $1,000,000 an nually.) Coast Line was winner in the 20,000,000 to 50,000,000 man-hours group. Its rate was 3.02 as com pared with 6.55 for all railroads in the group. \ BIG THRILL Gatesville.—Mrs. C. M. Law rence had a special thrill in store for her when she visited Mr. and Mrs. Trent Bowen in Durham last week. She was able to meet her first great-granddaughter, Margaret Elizabeth Bowen, who is also her namesake. No Takers for Burned Buick Corapeake.—A 1947 Buick was burned near Corapeake last week and up to the present time offi cers are still in the dark as to who is the owner of the auto. The motor number and serial number do not correspond and I the car is not listed in either j Virginia or North Carolina, they j said. The car bore a North Caro | lina dealer’s license which was | issued to a firm in Columbia, N. C. When contacted, this dealer said the license plate in question was issued to one of his salesmen, who had left that firm, taking the plates with him. His where abouts are also unknown at this Patrolman J. J. Carter of Gates said the car was almost com pletely destroyed by fire and gave evidence of having been set on fire purposely. A gasoline can was found nearby and the auto burned bad enough to melt the carburetor, he said. A check with the FBI failed to j bring to light any record of the \ car being stolen in the two-state | area. | Miss Lassiter 1 Passes Away; Rites Tuesday Sunbury.—Miss Annie M. Las itser, 78, died at her home here Sunday afternoon at 2:30 after a lingering illness, She was the daughter of the late Allen and Lucy Lassiter; a native of Gates County; a member of the Dama cus Christian Church and Secre tary and Treasurer of the Wom ans Missionary Society of that church for many years. She is survived b three brothers, G. S. Lassiter, of Corapeake, W. B. Lassiter, of Drivers, and W. H. Lassiter, of Sunbury; two sisters, Mrs. W. J. Hudgins, Matthews, 1 and Miss Lucy G. Lassiter, Sun bury. j Funeral services were conduct i ed Tuesday afternoon at three i o’clock at the Damascus Christ ! ian Church. The pastor. Rev. T. Fred Wright, conducted the ser vices. Burial was in the church cemetery. j The body was removed from the Rountree and Hofler Funeral Home, Gatesville, to the church one hour before the service. Pvt. Howell At Fort Knox Fort Knox, Kv.—Army Pvt. Robert T. Howell, 23, son of Mrs. John R. Howell, of Eure, recently was graduated from the track vehicle maintenance course at The Armored School, Fort Knox, Ky. The course trains enlisted per sonnel to repair track vehicles issued to armored units. The men also are taught administrative functions of unit maintenance shops. Howell entered the Army in December 1954 and completed basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C. He attended Gatesville High School. His wife, Ann, is living in Valley Station, Ky. RUNAWAY TRUCK Roduco.—A Johnstown, Pa., motorist, Alex Waynik was killed and four other persons injured when a tractor-trailer ran away and smashed an auto into a sun porch of a home, sheared off a telephone pole and caused heavy damage. The driver, William Roberts of Roduco was slightly injured. Mrs. Eure Entertains Eure.—Guests at the Galloping Tea ^ere entertained by Mrs. Gurnie Eure in her home Tues day night. Refreshments were server to Mesdames Troy Greene, Ernest Smith, Nathan Eure, Min nie Jenkins, Tom Doughtie, Gur nie Eure, and Troy Allen Greene. Salk W, To Be Ship; ^ Gatesville. — Mrs. Roy Ha„ county health nurse, has announc ed that she was notified Friday, July 1, that the second shipment i of the Sulk polio vaccine would I be available in the near future I for completion of the program | started in the spring. The exact 1 date of the shipment was not | given, she said, but in all prob ! ability it would be released within the next 30 days. Members of the local board of health advised against giving the vaccine dining the hot summer months, she said. They decided it best to wait until fall when the schools reopened before complet ing the Salk vaccine program. Mrs. Hayes also stated that this applies to the first and second grades of both the Buckland High School in Gates and the T. S. Cooper School in Sunbury. Health Center Schedule Set Gatesville. — Mrs. Roy Ilayes announced last Friday that she will be on vacation from Mon day, July 11, through Friday. July 15. Public health nurses from Hert ford County will be at the Health Center for the Wednesday and all day Friday clinics. Mrs. Daniels will conduct the Wednesday clinic at the Health Center July 13 from 9 till 12 noon. Mrs. Hill will conduct the all day Friday clinic July 15, with hours from 9 till 12 in the morn ing and from 2 till 5 in the after Mrs. Hayes stated that July 13 and July 15 will be the only time the Health Center will be opened next week. j3- s. Ralph Is