Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / June 8, 1950, edition 1 / Page 3
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RC€rf|SH NEWS — By Mrs. A. A. McTnnli. — Army Air Fc»c€. He was assisted to San Antonio, Texas for basic training and left Monday evening. Bible school at Tabernacle church opened Monday evening with a very good attendance. Mifes Lillie Wood spent the past week end at Dunn and attended the Barefoot reunion Sunday. E\^rything seems strangely quiet at Rockfish this week with no children’s voices heard from the schoolhouse as they play. Mrs. Marshall Ray’s brother- in-law, A. S. Richardson, his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. ' and Mrs. Sam Richardson and daugh ter of Rocky Mount were guests of Mrs. Ray last Sunday. They also visited Mrs. Maude Gillis and other relatives while here. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Yeargan and children of Gibson spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Brock and Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Bundy Mrs. Bundy and sons, Wayne and Jerry, returned with them to Gib son for a few days visit, Sunday. Mrs. P. C. English and Mrs. A. \\ A. Mclrinis represented Rockfish club at the County Council meet ing of H. D. Clubs at Raeford Monday. Mrs. Lona Smith of Maxton was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Rit ter last week end. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Pickett and family of Fayetteville spent Sun day with Mrs. M. R. Knight. Prof. R. D. DeMent of the New berry College faculty, Newberry, S. C. visited his sister, Mrs. D. E Miller and family last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Little and son Melton, visited in Western North Carolina the past week end. Prof, and Mrs. T. C. Jones left this week for High Point to at tend summer school at High Point College. Harold Tillman spent last Sun day in Colfax where he attended a chui^ch meeting. Misses Patricia Ritter and Jane Wood are attending Leadership Conference at FMC Red Springs this week. Members of the Sandy Grove Ladies Aid met in the hoihe of Mrs. Robert Hmdrix Tuesday. Fannie Gibson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A- Gibson, and Tom mie Peden of Washington, D. C. were married in South Carolina last Sunday, May 4th. They stop ped for a short visit with Mr. and Mrs. Gibson on their way to Wash ington Sunday. Mrs. Mary Webb and Jimmy left early Wednesday morning for Winston-Salem to visit rela tives. Mrs. Brown Hendrix and children took them up and spent the day. near Pilot Mountain Sund^. The Philippi Home Demonstra tion club met with Mrs. N. A. Mc- Keithan Friday afternoon. Mrs. Roy Shockley served / as joint hostess. A Demonstration on the Art of Staying Yoimg, was given by Mrs. R. W. Posey. Mrs. David Hendrix left for Charlotte Wednesday to stay a few days with her sister, Miss Pauline Huggins, who is very sick at the Catholi^, hospital there. Arabia News By Mrs. D. B. Traywick Correction Last week we stated that Mrs. Carrie McKenzie was recuperat ing at the home of her son, James McKenzie, near Maxton af ter a recent ' appendectomy. It should have read that Mrs. James McKenzie was recuperating after a recent appendectomy. Whiteford Jones and his moth er, Mrs, J. A. Jones are visiting relatives in Georgia and Florida this week. Philippi News By MRS. R. H. EDGE Miss Mary Guin is attending the Presbyterian Youth Fellow ship conference at Flora Macdon aid college this week^ Marion Wood, 1950 graduate of Hoke High School, has joined the $ y * ® I * y y * $ * y y * y * y ft y WILL BE CLOSED 12th thru JUNE 17th FOR INSTALLATION OF NEW MACHINERY RAEFORD DRY CLEANERS Benny McFadyen, Capt. and Mrs. Roy Oestriech and family of Dothan, Alabama, arrived Satur day morning for a /visit with homefolks. Mrs. D. P. Gillis and Mrs. R H. Edge represented the Philippi club Monday afternoon at the County Council meeting of Home Demonstration clubs. 9 Relatives attending the funeral services for Franklin Berkman of 9 Dunn at the McFadyen Cemetery in Hope Mills Monday afternoon * were: Mr. and Mrs. J. L. McFad- yen, Mrs. Allie K. McGougan, Mrs. Lillie McDougald, Mrs. Car- $ rie McKenzie, Mrs. Ella Traywick. 1 '4 Mrs. Bessie Riddle, and Mr. and h i Mrs. Jim Jordan, and family. 9 * Misses Elva McGougan, Ray $ and Jean McMillan are spending this week with Mrs. Carl Nunny- t maker of Manteo. $ * Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Davis and i son, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Livington and family, and Mr. and Mrs. C. 9 * ^ D. Pritchett and son are visiting in the home of Stacy Davis and family in upper New York state A $ this week. ,S 1 Mrs. C. D. Bostic spent Tues- day in Laurel Hill with Mrs. Mary (aamaamk Yarborough. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Parsons and family, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Guin and family, Mr. and Mrs. D. Matlock and family and Mary Kate Mclnnis enjoyed £ picnic supper Sunday afternoon. Mrs. R. H. Edge was hostess to her circle Sunday evening at 7:30. Mrs. Albert Guin had charge of the program. * y f; i I i i Mrs. Vernon Parsons will at tend conference at Flora Mac- donad college as counselor. Mrs. J. A. Patterson spent the week end at Eastover with her son and family, Daniel Patterson. Mr. and Mrs. Allie Gillis and family of Tennessee and Mr. and Mrs. Watson Gillis and daughter of Washington visited in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Guin re cently. 2^84 sold wfflto Chevrolet raa second with 24M. Chevrolet led in truck sales with 894 and Ford was with 718 sales. Mechlenburg was tops in car sales with 654. Guilford was sec ond with 545. Wake was third with 470 and Forsyth fourth with 359. Mecklenburg also led in truck sales with 162. Wake followed with 128 and Guilford was third with 107. 0— North' Carolina farmers are highly pleased with the wool clip from the western ewes they bought last summer through the North Carolina Department of Agriculture. D. D. Kponce has returned home from the Veterans hospital and is doing nicely. Fermate will control black spot o nroses, as well as most oth er eaf diseases, if properly arid regularly applied. * Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Parsons chaperoned a hay ride ajid weiner roast last Saturday night for the teenagers. Mrs. R. W. Posey attended the homecoming of her old church Mrs. Jim Reynolds attended the funeral of her aunt, Mrs. Jessup, at Vass Sunday. 32,001 Cars Sold In N. C. This Year April numbered 8,656, bringing total sales for the year to 32,001, the North Carolina -Department of Motor Vehicles reported today. Truck sales totaled 2,237 bring ing the year’s sales to 8,039. In the same month last year, car sales were listed at 7.197 and truck sales at 2,054. Ford led in'sales of cars with 1 WILL HATE 14 New Hones For Sale in Sunset Hills and ebe- where in Raeford. FHA Loan will be available on all these homes for as nraeh as 90 per cent and G. L Loans for as much as 100 per cent Jalian Wright THE MEAL THAT REFRESHES Best way to get the heat of the day off your mind come in here for one of our delicious hot day salads top ped off with an iced dessert and drink! You'll like the ser/ice, prices too! Raeford, N. C. Pfftfrwr.v treat. They’ll all have fun in this roomy 4-door Sedan with generous luggage space for trips. Shown here is the Special* Sam© body lyp© available also in #be SUPER sene*. — 1^ -J into m Look at the FUN yon'ie missing I The spider doesn’t have to drag his dinner into the web. Just one willing step inside, and the unthinking fly is hopelessly trapped, a strand at a time. That’s how a nation gets trapped into a socialistic form of government. Not all at once—but a strand at a time—until all liberty is lost. Here’s how it happens. The government of such a country —in the guise,of the people’s welfare—begins to assume more and more control over that nation’s industries and serv ices. Little by little, the people turn their responsibilities over to their government— and, eventually, their liberties as well. And it can happen here. There are in America people who want the government to have more and more control over American life. “Let the government begin,” they say, ^Ijy taking over the doctors, the railroads, the newspapers, the electric light and power compani^.” It's strange, but many of these people— like most Americans—don’t really want a socialistic U.S. A. But the result is the same. When government, a little at a time, controls enough things, you have a socialist nation, whether you want it or not. But by then it is too late. Remember the fly and the spider web. That first step in is the most important/ • "MEET CORLISS ARCHER" for delightful comedy. CBS, Sundays, 9 P. M., Eastern Time. SB S URE, we know—a car is a **ne- cessity" these days. A modem family ’’couldn’t get along without one.” Or so you tell yourself. Come, come, sir! We know, and so do you, the real reason you got the new-car fever—and the kind of car you are hankering for. want a car with some fim in it, don’t you? A car you’ll get a big bang out of every time you see it parked in front of your house—every time you slip into its front seat—every sweet and easy mile you travel in it. Well, come see what this beauty does for you. H ow the doors swing open in warm welcome at a thumb touch on a button. How the broad seats invite you to take it easy. How the big straight-eight under the WMATEVffJt YOUa PBiCE SASGE bonnet snaps into purring life at your toe-touch. And then note— How smoothly you slip away from the curb-^especially when Dyna- flow* is handling the power trans mission. How firm and steady the whole car feels. How it holds on curves, free of ”heel-over” and sway. How each coil-sprung wheel quicksteps over bumps and rough spots that mean jounce and jiggle on most cars—how buoyantly road-free a Buick is. *Dvnafioso Driee se ttamdmri m SQJUIMASTKS. op- titmal at extra eott oss SUnB emi SPECIAL module. FWm-WAT FOMEWaOMT This ragged froet end (1) rnh the style note, (2) taeee om repair costs — vertical bars are imSvidealy raphceebie, (S)avoids ^lackleg hams," (4) esakes park, lag aad gatogiag easier. Fun? You bet it’s fun—too mudi fun to miss. And there’s no reason to miss it; really, for this strapping traveler is priced under many sixes. Starts at figures just an easy step above the so-called Lowest Price cars. What’s keeping you from trying one, when the nearest Buick dealer is ready to demonstrate without obligation any time you want to call on him. OiUy BtMiek baa OlfltaflOllhmm and wiih it ffoaas HIOHM-COMEUSSIOM PirebaU valvaMieed power in three eaginae. (New M63 engitsa hs SUPER sscdebj • paw-PAmut srruMO, wMs MULTI-RUAAD ferehant, taper- tkraagh fenders, "daebla hebbla" tdillighfs * WfOf-AffOU VfSmU jpr, deee-ep road view bath far. "vard aad bade • nAPnC-MANOv" SUMf last arar-all letsgHt far sarier parkimg aad garagitrg, shert terniag radlat • IXTKA-WfOf SEATS eradlad behreea the axles • SOPT BtnCK UDt. from aUoii Springing^ Safefy-Ride rims, low-pressure Href, ride-steodying fonjue-hibe • WIOS AARAt OP MODELS wRh Body by Fishar, Tune in HENRY J. TAYLOR, ABC Network, every Mondoy evening. lBj»i9WWWiHNVAWA‘-*AW.v.-. YooK Key to Greatei value PHONE 254-1 MORGAN MOTOR CO. Raeford, N. C. WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM M
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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June 8, 1950, edition 1
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