Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Jan. 31, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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■^I'V.' V t’^r W l^ocrristl NEWS — By lin. A. A Mdimto. — itts* Anna Ray. i®*B* ••▼- «nil wedcs visiting rdativw in Portsmouth, Va^ has rettnied hosne. Miw; Betty Joe Lovette of Way- side was a guest of Miss Patricia Ritter Sunday. O. Lu Townsend, T. C. Jones, Oscar Wood, Clarence Koonce and Clarence Pittman attended -the National Ruritan Conv«»tioh in A*eville the first of the wedr. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Edmond son and children of Dunn were guests of Mrs. M. D. GxUis, Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Gillis, Jr. Sunday. Women of the Church pro^am Monday night, cut her finger so badly while preparing supper at her home that she had to get med ical aid. Sgt. Francis Parks of Parris Island visited J. W. Caddell, Jr. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sanders spent Monday night in Raeford with W. R. Sanders. officers. F. P. Johnson was elected Master, Mrs. & G. Capps, Lec- turm* and the Rev. D. E. Miller, Chaplain. Some of the other of ficers were re-elected. The time for meeting was changed from the first Wedensday night in the second Monday night. Officers will .be installed at the February meeting by N. H. G. Balfour and all members, as well as officers, are urged to be present. etteville Sunday. B. B. Cole was right sick the first of the week with influenza. Mrs. Floyd Mohroe was taking the tax list at Rockfish last Fri day. She^ will be here again next Friday at O. L. Townsend’s store. Miss Jane Wood, soloist on the CLEANERS AND TAILORS ^S>^6me6zMt Swde* Smct r928 REDSPRINO-S ^ AAIFORD Fbone 2111 • •4 !••• Hioiie 5C7 Mr. and Mrs. Earl Raynor and children, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Iz- zell and Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Izzell of Fayetteville were guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Quinn Sunday. Mrs. J. G. Gibson and sister, Miss Dorothy Cain, visited their parents at Garland Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Gibson at tended church services at Trinity Methodist church in Red Springs Sunday. It, was Mrs. Gibson’s sister, Mrs. W. F. Bound’s birthday and Mr. and Mrs. Gibson had din ner with Mr. and Mrs. Bounds at their home in Red Springs before the services.\ isli liOOK BUU.P06 OM PE 6^. More diamonds are flashing and more wedding bells will soon be .ringing around here. - i««il ’ «. .. ' 'w. ' '• ' / Mrs. Marshall Ray and Mrs. A. A. Ray were among those who at tended the shower given for Mrs. David Mclnnis,' recent bride, at Galatia last Thursday night. Smith Mclnnhs of Raeford Tour ist Court, was slightly ill the past week end. Mr. and Mrs. M. L Aldridge and family left Sunday morning to visit relatives to Con cord and Sparta. They expect to return next Sunday. Mrs. M. D. Gillis, Jr.' substi tuted as teacher for Principal T. C. Jones while he was in Ashe ville. Mrs. Albert Sanders, who has ■been a patient at the Navy ho^i- tal at Portsmouth, Virginia, came home the past week end will be at home for about a Ihonth. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Brown and A. A. Wright of Raleigh visited relatives here Sunday. Mrs. H,enry Terrell was taken to Highsmith hospital for treat ment last week, after having pfteumonia. Mrs.- Terrell was ser iously ill but is now improving slowly. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pemberton of Oak Ridge spent the past week end with Mrs. C. L. Wood and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Lee of Sampson County visited in the home of Cleveland Barefoot Sun day. Mrs. A. H. Ray, who has been confined to her home for several months on account of illness, was able to visit her brother, J. E. Wood and family Sunday. Also visiting with Mrs. Ray were Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hay of Hope,Mills and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Ray, 4, -that’s Chilean Nitrate ... rich in sodium and minor plant food elements • Nitrate Nitrogen All_the nitrogen in Natural Chilean Nitrate is fast-act ing nitrate. Dissolves in normal soil moisture ... is completely available to the crop. Nitrogen increases yield and improves quality of food cind feed crops . . . nitrate of soda furnishes more nitrate nitrogen than any other alkaline nitrate. * Sodium — improves crop heoith and vigor Natural Chilean Nitrate is rich in sodium — contains 267c of this element (equiv alent to 35% sodium oxide). Sodium can act like potasli — may partially substitute for it in potash-deficient * soil. By itself, sodium in creases the availability of applied phosphate... tends to have a “sweetening” ef fect on the soil, • Rich, in minor plant food elements Natural traces of other ele ments are found in Chilean Nitrate. These include iodine, inanganese, copper, zinc, boron, magnesium, cal cium, iron and sulphur. In smfl^quantities, these ele- ment/are essential to proper plant or animal nutrition. • Free-flowing pellet fprm Chilean Nitrate can be ap-. plied in any standard dis tributor. For larger yields and top-quality crops, order Natural Chilean Nitrate of Soda — proved by more than 100 years of experience. Marion Wood of the 5th Air ■Force in Korea has been promot ed from Corporal to Sergeant re cently, and is expected to come home soon. Guess he will be get ting used to his new title while he waits his turn to ,come home. Mr. and Mrs. George Dees had , all their children with them for i dinner Sunday. They were Mr. I and Mrs. Lynn Dees and daugh- j ters, Lynda Kay and Katheryne 1 Ann, Bruce Elbert, Miss Etta Mae, I Ham and Harold Dees. Sgt. Dees : left that afternoon for Texas. A j special guest for the occasion was Miss Jean Lambert of Fayette ville. Mr. and Mrs- Walter Brock and son, W. M., Were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E, T. Brock Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Beasley and family were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Caruso in Fay- m Si f ai The Women of tlTe Church, Ga latia, met Monday night. After a business session in the ladies Bible class room they assembled in the sanctuary for a world mis sion program led' by Mrs, A. A Ray. Those taking part were Mrs. J. E. Ray, Mrs. David Mclnnis, Miss Bert Capps, Mrs, Carrie Belle Gillis, Mrs. Briggs,and Miss Car oline Parker. John Archie Black and Thomas Mclnnis substituted with instrumental music in place of a solo by Miss Jane Wood. Miss Pearl McLeod of Raeford was a week end guest of Misses Allie and Katie Black. Miss Mc Leod visited her niece, Mrs. Ed Bundy last week. . 0 The Senate Expenditures Com mittee has reported that in the four 3'ears between Janaury 1, 1947,-and January 1, 1951, Con gress s.pent nea"ly $7,009,000 on special investigations. O Hens on North Carolina farms laid more than a million eggs in 1950. ,Vw)' on l.nuhl NEW STOCK Coker's 1952 SEASON »iyii COKERS PEDfCRCED L SEED i BLOOD A TOBACCO SEED Variety 1 Of. COKER’S GOLDEN CURB’51 18.00 COKER’S GOLDEN HARVEST ’61 8>00 Resistant to Granville and Fusarium wilt COKER’S GOLDEN WILT *61 8.00 COKER’S MAMMOTH GOLD COKER’S GOLD DOLLAR COKER’S YELLOW MAMMOTH 2.00 2.00 2J)0 Resistant to black shank and Granville wilt CERTIFIED DIXIE BRIGHT 101 2.00 CERTIFIED DIXIE BRIGHT 102 2.00 Resistant to l^lack shank CERTIFIED OXFORD 1-181 2.00 -0- Small grain stands in Cabarrus County appear to be unusually good this season. More, than 300 com'mercial strawberry growers ' in Columbus County have placed orders for plants of the new, hxgh-yieldin)g Albritton variety. CERTIFIED VIRGINIA GOLD 2.00 CERTIFIED 402 2.00 , CERTIFIED BROADLEAF HICKS 2.00 ASK FOR 1»52 SEASON TOBACCO SEED CATALOG Also Bissette’s and Watson Tobacco Seed And V Plenty of Tobacco Canvas From $9.00 Up with Eyelets JOHNSON COTTON CO. OF RAEFORD, INC. ||| ■viji; iiigi'i 0 . II " Out of tWo comes the inBuickWstonf A Mrs. A. W. Wood, Mrs. Mary Mclnnis and Thomas Mclnnis at tended the supper, for the March of D'mes at Philippi Saturday night. The Wayside Grange, met last Wednesday night at the commun ity house for the election of 10'52 FARMERS * Plow Points * Plow Lines and Trace Chains * Names and Back Bands * Bridles, Collars and Collar Pads And We Still Have Plenty Of V/4^ Inch PUMP PIPE Wright &' Currie Hardware | INCORPORATED BELTON'ilP^GHT FRANK CURRIE note from your BUICK DEALER: Presented here is the did i®**’ development, as fold y entirety-as we We reprint the story here in couldn't beat it if we tried. ]^o, we didn’t have to build a new engine. We took Buick’s valve-in-head Fireball Engine-which makes the most of high com pression. We drew on 12 patient years of Buick carburetion research. And W6 came up with wore fnor6 tniles, frow ^as—right out of thin air, in wore ways than one. When you talk about “miles per gallon” you think of fuel, because that’s what you buy. But air’s free—and for every gallon of gaso line, a busy engine can gulp more than 8,000 gallons of air. The problem is to deliver air in therigl^ proportions, throughout the full rtfn^ of speeds at which you drive. A carburetor-big enough to supply the air needed at full throttle-can be wasteful in stop-and-go driving. A carburetor sized for thrift in city trafi&c literally smothiers your engine when you really give it the gun. So Buick engineers developed the Airpower carburetor — a four-barrel automatic - and here’s how it works. Loafing along, two barrels are working, two stay closed. And you get a low-speed thrift and smoothness that’s out of this world. As you pick up speed, the “stand-bys” come into play-feeding not just more gas, but more air too-so you keep getting maxi mum power from each drop of fuel. You have 170 effortless horsepower when you need it—a tremendous reserve ready to go into instant action at the nudge of your toe. You have the satisfaction of knowing that you get this power with a frugal use of gas. At^ you use less gas than you formerly used at 30. * * That’s the story of Airpower carburetion in facts and figures straight from the factory. But statistics can’t tell you the breath-taking l^y of heading for new horizons in a great- powered new Roadmaster. When can you do that? Better come in soon. Lots of other folks are flocking into our showroom these days to see the greatest array of new Buicks we’ve had in years. Equipment, acceesorUe, trim and models are subject to change without notice. Sure is true ferSi en be ■ MORGAN MOTOR COMPANY Phone 738 Ave. Raeford, N. C.
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Jan. 31, 1952, edition 1
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