Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / March 7, 1952, edition 1 / Page 9
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 7, 1952 «—■— - - — —~ Along The Routes 0 By John Folljett This is the third of three columns devoted to Harnett County families who have one thing in common: they each have nine children. The first family, the Parkers, are white; the second, the McLeans, are col mgm ■ HH if Jack Wardlaw LIFE MEMBER OF THE MILLION DOLLAR ROUND TABLE is available to make an analysis of your life insurance and dis ability policies. For an appointment with ; i Jack Wardlaw Write 1401 Insurance Bldg. Raleigh, N. C. Telephone Raleigh 2-4433 ERWIN SUPPLY COMPANY i P SEE IT HERE! SEE IT HOW! . , . ! . -HuoLMHf The Frame of Light That’s Kinder to Your Eyes ■ i i. m 1 ipSS nALUUbItI has a built-in, soft border of light _ to relieve the sharp contrast between the bright pic ture tube and the darker areas’ around it. I | Scientifically correct! New! Amazing! Developed by Sylvania with 50-vears background in lighting and |VW| xm Sylvania Movie-Clear* television has all the power MT ™ you need, plus precision ... for close-in reception or in W fringe “Triple-Lock” to keep out interference., v /; n ’ '*/ aft '» £ Rock-Steady pictures... Built-in provision for UHF ’hU . y- y•: i;; ' T- ’ u . reception: • / ’ ' Sft £yl..ni. “ith H.loLlOHrl—r. l -...i.mn Hi.— ored. The third family, the Brew ingtons, are colored also, but the color is red. At least Indians are supposed to be red. Actually the only red faces I ever saw are worn by "white” . men. Be that as it- may, Frank Brew ington was a great disappointment to me. I am an Incurable Lone Ranger fan. Brewington didn’t say, “Me do it.” like Tonton. He didn’t wear feathers. He looked and talk ed just like any other farmer. In fact. I didn’t know he wac an Indian until he told me he comes from Pembroke and I had a sudden hunch to ask him his background. The Brewingtons are Pembroke Cherokees, that branch of the tribe who have adopted white man’s ways and are largely accepted as white men even in race conscious North Carolina. They did have schools of their own. The Brewington children attend Maple Grove School or East ern Carolina High School, both ex clusively Indian. Most movie thea ters attempt to segregate Indians with Negroes, so the Brewingtons stay away from the movies. Other wise they are generally accepted on an equal footing wherever they go. Frank Brewington is tall and straight and broad shouldered. Come to think of it, he would look well in Indian regalia. The only one of his children whom I have seen, Judy Lane, is beautiful. I told her father that she is my girl friend. He replied that she likes me too. ■» ■ y ..—..-I. : ■ "j Dancing Up In The Clouds! EL IF Vera-Ellen and Fred Astaire liteai'y dance in the air in one of the arresting production numbers of their new M-G-M Technicolor musi cal, "The Belle of New York,” opening at the Stewart Theatre. Mar jorie Main and Keenan Wynn are other principals in a song-and laugh-filied story of a Bowery mission worker who falls in love with a dancing playboy. The movie opens here Sunday. . So I have made a conquest. I don’t think my wife has cause to be jealous. Judy Lane is 6. Unlike the other families of nine, VRE DAILY RECORD, DfTffN. IL Ct the Brewingtons • are all still at home. The oldest boy has registered for army service, but he has not yet been called. There are six boys and three girls. - S ' Brewington and his wife," the for mer Suzy Ann Maynor, attended Pembroke Indian School together, They eloped to Dillon,- S. C. and ware married" November IS, 1831, Their children ire as follows: Mag alihe, 19; Henry Franklin, 18; Wil liam Ander, 18; Betty Lou. 14; 1 Charlie B„ 13; Hughie Dallas; 9; Henry Felton, 7; Judy Lane, 5; and Purchase! Supply Come In Today 1 ■ - I ■ M __ e -a., ■ HR £|| WIT TIMES Now you can enjoy all the advantages of O-E “Speed Cooking"-in this full- l) I size G-E Range with Automatic Oven Timer—at a price that’s so low you > I almost have to look twice to believe itl I There are so many features beside* those shown here—-built-in lamp, easy-to- , I 1 use switches with 5 exact cooking speeds, shiny porcelain-enamel finish—and I * ihQ^aHinc^Kleaiathrtl 01 *prkului! ovimut Wim siatmincowwi I ONLY A FEW AND THEY'RE GOING FASTI COME IN TODAY AND SEE th 3^ und JXlSrfd!*?* I | THIS AND OTHM :M ••SKtDXOOKIN'i" UHBCSI 1 *j I , : • ••• V dkf«> ?uv.■'•-ask - ■ ■ :$■ __ -••,Miami*'- k m t- : !■ I llifl fmwriß BrnW BPitrH lH I ® ® I sspntilnnnfl To Cnnin—Your Form Aw*j Hartid^T'" .v'ij&S James Atty, less than 1. The Brewingtons are tenant farmers but do own 16 of the acres they till. The Parkers, the McLeans, the Brewingtons, 27 people, 3 families, 3 "different races. These people 1 seem to me to symbolize the best that our country has to offer. I’m glad I met them. . WASHINGTON (W-Marvin Bass, former head coach at William and Mary, signed today as line coach of the professional Washington Red- I skins. The 32-year-old Bass, who was a star lineman at William and Mary, resigned from his alma mater re cently in protest against the school’s athletic policies. He served as Carl Snavely’s as- PAGE THREE SECOND GENERATION ~ DURHAM.—Wayne Ambler Cun ningham of Ablngton, Pa., a Duke sophomore who won a letter as a varsity soccer player this year, Is the nephew of Wayne Ambler, Duke basebal star and graduate of 1937 who later played with the • Phila delphia AtlUetlcs. distant at North Carolina In 1949
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 7, 1952, edition 1
9
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