Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / April 26, 1984, edition 1 / Page 6
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In Weeks To Come Meetings AMERICAN LEGION -- American Legion Port 20 of Hoke County meets the memmi Taesday of each month at the Edinborough Restaurant at 8:00 p.m. Those interested in joining are invited. COUNTY COMMISSION - Members of the Hoke County Commission meet the first Moaday of each month at 9 a.m. and the tMrd Moaday at 7:30 p.m. Pratt Building located at 227 N. Main St. in Raeford. The public is invited. CITY COUNCIL - The Raeford City Council meets the ftrst Moaday of each month at 7 p.m. in City Hall. The public is encouraged to attend. SCHOOL BOARD - The Hoke County Board of Educa tion meets the first Taeaday of each month at 7 p.m. at the board offices on Wooley Street. The public is encourag ed to attend. AL ANON - Meetings are held every Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Hoke County Health Department Conference Room. April 25 BEEF. PORK. EGG REFERENDA - The polling places are the Rockfish Com munity Building, the Agricultural Extension Office, Dundarrach Trading Company and Community Grocery at Five Points. They will be open from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Gatherings April 29-May 4 SPRING REVIVAL -- A spring revival will be held April 29-May 4 at the Ephesus Bap tist Church beginning at 7:30 p.m. The guest speaker will be Rev. Robert E. Philyaw of Timmonsville, South Carolina. May 1 FILM - "Path to the Future" will be shown on Tuesday, May 1 at Freedom Chapel AME Zion Church at 8 p.m. The public is invited. May 5 FASHION SHOW - There will be a fashion show at the Freedom AME Zion Church in Raeford on Saturday, May 5, at 7:30 p.m. Dinner will be served and Soloist Benetia Thomas will perform. Tickets are $3. The public is invited. Call Derine McMillan at 875-5156 for tickets. May 6 PREACHING - The first Sun day in May at 3 p.m. Evangelist Roberta Handon will be speak ing a! House of Prayer Mission located in Queenmore, member of St. Mary Church. May 20 SW AGGART MINISTRIES - Jimmy Swaggart Ministries will be presented live via satellite May 20 at II a.m. at the Fours quare Church on E. Prospect Avenue in Raeford. Events April 29 ARTS IN PARK - Coming soon is the 14th Annual Arts in the Park Festival! Laurinburg's Hammond Park will once again be the setting for the April 29 Show, Featured in this' year's Festival will be a huge array of artist's works, crafts for sale, foods galore and fami ly entertainment which includes a puppet show, "Red Riding Hood, Ya'll" by the Lynch Puppeteers and Ray Codr ington and "Group Sax" with live music. May 3 POPS CONCERT -- The Fayetteville Symphonic Band will present a "Pops" concert at Reeves Auditorium, Methodist College, Fayetteville at ft p.m. on May 3. Public in vited and a small admission is charged May 5 THE EMBERS LIVE - The North Carolina-based Embers will be performing a selection of beach and pop music at the old National Guard Armory grounds Saturday, May 5 from I p.m. until 3 p.m. in conjunc tion with the Hoke Heritage Hobnob. Advance tickets will be S3 and can be purchased from The News-Journal, Howell Drug Company, The Limited Edition and the Hoke High School administrative of fice. Tickets can also be pur chased from any festival direc tor. The public is encouraged to attend. May 9 SATURDAY ON THE TOWN - Saturday on the Tow* ia a day-Ions festival fcpo?ored by the Aits Couadl of Wilson in cooperation with the Downtown Redevelopment Corporation. The festival is Saturday, May 5 and will last from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. with ac tivities ranging from a barbecue cook-off lo arts and crafts displays. Live musical entertainment has been scheduled throughout the day. In case of rain, the entire festival will move to the Wat son Warehouse thai same day. May M ARTS * CRAFTS - The Uwharrie Arts A Crafts Festival will be held at Montgo mery Technical College in Troy on May 5-6, from Saturday 10 a.m.-S p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Music, arts, crafts, food will be featured. r April ? LAW DAY - The Police Com munity Relations Class at FayettevUU Technical College of the Criminal Justicc Depart ment will hold its 10th Annual Law Day on Sunday, April 29. from 1-3 p.m. Exhibits for Law Day will range from displays of local, state and federal police; fire departments; finger printing for children; a polygraph machine, etc. in an attempt to better educate the public on the activities of law enforcement and public service officials. The public is invited. April N GOLD DUST - COLD DUST, an hilarious and high stepping production will be performed by The Road Company of Johnson City, Tennessee, at Scotland High School auditorium in Laurinburg, North Carolina on Monday, April 39 at 8 p.m. under the sponsorship of Scotland Arts AIR SHOW - A portion of the air show at the Pope AFB-Fort Bragg Open House April 28 will be a capabilities demonstration of the C-130 Hercules transport flown by Pope's 317th Tactical Airlift Wing. As shown here, the C-130, now in its 30th year of ser vice with the Air Force, skims just five feet above the ground for a Low Altitude Parachute Extraction (LAPE) of heavy cargo. (U.S. Air Force photo) May lf-12 CRAWFISH FESTIVAL - The fourth annual South Carolina Crawfish festival and Aquaculture Fair will begin in Pawley's Island Thursday May 10 and will continue until Saturday. May 12. Entertain ment, which includes musi cians, dancers, food and games for everyone, will be "non stop" from noon until 5 p.m. on May 10 and from U a.m. until 6 p.m. May 11 awl 12. The festival highlights the first commercial crawfish harvest. Crawfish, prepared in a variety of ways, will be served throughout the festival. The public is urged to attend. May 13 GERSHWIN YEARS - Two pieces are included on the pro gram of the Moore County Choral Society's Spring Con cert. They are light, whimsical, with an English madrigal flavor. The unique Gershwin touch is evident. The concert is Sunday, May 13 with perfor mances at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. at the Performing Arts Center, Southern Pines. For the Mozart "Regina Coeli" a string quartet will accompany the group. Tickets are available from MCCS members, from the MCCS at P.O. Box 272 Southern Pines 28387, and from the Arts Council office on f . Conn. Ave.. 692-4356. Adult admission is (4 and students $2. Doings ?hm April 29 AT ?e little theatre ~~ Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" will be presented by: Fayetteville Little Theatre on April 25-29 Wednesday through Sunday evenings at 8:15 p.m.; matinees at 2:15 on April 29. Ticket prices are $6 on Wed.. Thurs., Sat. matinees and Sunday even ing performances. $7 on Friday evenings, Saturday evenings and Sunday matinees. Box of fice will be open from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. daily. April 26 ~ The Concert Choir of Pembroke State University will the S,,eTwcTUi- "The Sevm L?t Wordi of Christ." by Theodore Dubois, Thursday. April 24. at Moore Ha|| "8 p m Ad?? sion is free. April 27 free CLINIC _ A free speech, language and hearing clinic will be sponsored by Southeastern Speech and Hear ing Services of Fayetteville and The Crippled Children's Pro gram for local youths and six months through 21 years on Friday April 27. The Clinic will be held at the Hoke County Public Library between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. No appointment will be necessary The clinic will be staffed by Southeastern's audiologiits and speech pathologists Council. Tickets are available at the door $6 for adults and $3 for students. For more infor mation call Scotland Arts Council at 276-6246. May 3 MED-AVAC - Members of the Hoke County Rescue Squad are sponsoring a demonstration by a Ft. Bragg Med-avac unit on May 3 at 5 p.m. The unit will demonstrate procedures of an emergency airlift. The public is invited. All city and county law enforce ment officers, volunteer fire department members and EMS personnel are encouraged to at tend. IWi May 5 AT BORDEAUX - "Two By Two" the last Richard Rodgers musical will be presented by the Bordeaux Dinner Theatre in Fayetteville until Saturday, 5. This heartwarming musical which is based on the story of Noah and the Ark star red Danny Kaye in the lead role on Broadway. The action takes place before, during and after the Flood. A buffet dinner is served before the show. The pl*y will run each week Thurs day through Sunday with a special Wednesday evening per formance on April 18. The bo* office is open noon to 6 p.m each day at 323-1114 for reser vations or information. May 5 PI^NT SALE - A plant sale will be held all day May 5 in conjunction with Flora Mac donald Academy's May Day activities at the home of Don Averette on Shannon Road. May 9 SOLOISTS TO PERFORM - The Sandhills Community Col lege orchestra will perform on Wednesday. May 9 at 8 p.m. in the Performing Arts Center in Southern Pines. This concert will be 0pen IO the genera) public at no charge. The con cert will begin with Haydn's "Symphony No. 85 in B-Flai Major." Following will be the "Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op. 54" by Schumann. The soloist will be SCC piano in structor MacKellar Israel. Mrs. Frances Wilson, will also per form two selections from Mozart's "Le Nozze di Figaro." The orchestra will then perform "En Bateau" from Debussy's "PetiteSuite." Next, visiting artist Robert Weber will be the featured soloist on Haydn's "Cello Concerto in C Major. The final piece of the evening will be Schubert's "Symphony No 8 (unfinished) May 12 ST. PAULS FOLK FESTIVAL - Do you crochet, knit, carve P?int grow vegetables, bake cakes? I f so, you should be part of this year's Saint Paula Folk Festival, on Saturday, May 12 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. This year's event will be the Fifth Annual Celebration of the "Wage and culture of the area, with music, dancing, food, an* and crafts. The Featival will be held on the rounds of the Saint Pauls High School, and is sponsored by Saini Pauls City Schools ?*1 ?he N.C Arts Council. For information call (919) ?W-4299. Sports April 39 TENNIS ladder - The Hoke Tennis Association U ipooionng ? tenni* ladder for ilL'SrV0 * ^ble for the Udder, duet mint be Mid by ^ *? Membership dues ?re $10 - family; $J . single and ? Mude?w To join the association, contact Mary James or Terry Houston. Dues cEL^Jl!. Ice Oeam SocUJ ? McUuch^n P^kT?nU Court, on Shmday. 3 p.m. Udder com petition will begin on Mav I Swdin? for the Udders will be taken from a drawing or names ?ad numbers to match. Each will have, wild ?d in which he or she can use one thTLSuw "tPUy "^on laddi^j *dvance UP the ? player must challenge *"?A ??? * hw b??n challenged must P?y within two days or forfeit his seed. Awards will be SSTS? **dder winner, rhfm e fjoeed Association Clumpionslup Tournament in September. Awards will be presented throughout the *??o for the participation of the members who make the ladders active. May U GOLF TOURNEY - a Golf Tournament that will raise pa rent assistance and research funds for Muscular Dystrophy Association is scheduled to JS"*18:" ??. ?4. ?' Gates Four Golf Course in Fayetteville. a S40 registration includes the cart f*and beverages. Door prizes wOl be given during the tourna men' *nd trophies will be ?warded. Please support t? event whkh ^ suffering f*nd C?mf0" ,0 lh0ie suffenng from any one of 40 f,^^mUSCilUr diseas?- For further information contact: Vickie Richardson at 774-463( May U >?TH INDUSTRIAL GO 11 TOURNAMENT 7. cV C^iim'-H 'nd",rial Relations Committee Chairman of the ch^on/,Robe,on Coun'y Chamber of Commerce, ,n ,h" ?he 16th annual GoirE?" oun,y ,ndu*<rial .. L riUmem" ^ be held ?t the Pmecrest Country Club touml ' Co,t ?f 'he tournament u $M for a team of four, plus $5.00 gr*?, f?? ? non-country dub me^bcrv Complies wishing to sponsor ? team can call the Chamber a?re? (73??750>- Reservations ue required in advance with a deadline of Friday. May 4. May 19 GOLF TOURNAMENT - The Third Annual Swing-A-Club for Scouting Golf Tournament to be held at Ocean Isle Golf Course in Brunswick County on May 19 is being chaired by Rusty Russ of Shallotte. The purpose of the tournament is to keep the image of Scouting strong and promote additional sources ot tinancial support. The tournament is an A B C D Captain's Choice tournament. You may register as a team or individually. Registration fee is S100 or SI SO for a husband and wife. Hole in one prizes in clude a Ford Thunderbird, courtesy of Russ Ford, boat, motor, and trailer, courtesy of Shallotte Marine Supply and a 1984 C.J. Four Wheel Drive Jeep from Wells Oldsmobile. The player closest to the pin will receive a color television set. In addition winning teams will receive trophies, and there will be drawings, sourvenirs, and a free pig picking. The tournament starts at 12:30 p.m. You may register with Jim Campbell. Pro at 579-2610 or with the Boy Scouts at 762-1821. Register by mail by sending a check and your han dicap to Boy Scouts of America - Golf tournament. Ocean Isle Beach, PO Box 1626 Wilming ton, NC 28402. Everyone is in vited to participate. Blazons REUNION - The 1979 graduating class of Hoke High School is gathering informa tion to have a class reunion. Call 875-4802 or 875-3232 or write P.O. Box 162, Raeford, NC as soon as possible. May I SCHOOL OF MATH Deborah Basket), Admissions Representative at the North Carolina School of Scienc* and Mathematics, will conduct an information session at Up church Middle School in Raeford on Taeaday, May 1 at 1:30 p.m. She will explain the school's program and admis sions requirements to students. Parents and others are welcome to attend. The half-hour ses sion will include a slid* show. Further information it available from local school guidance counselors. Cal The News-Journal or Mag *?!??*? I*'"' to the offtc* before It a.a. oa Tocaday. I Country Boys slated for Hobnob As a part of the Hoke Heritage Hobnob Festival, The Country Boys from the Sanford area will be performing in front of the Hoke County Public Library on Thurs day, May 3, from 12:15 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. In case of inclement weather, they will perform inside the Library. Donald Foster, a retired farmer, heads up the band and plays the fiddle. He has been playing the fid dle since he was a young boy. Other members of the band are Howard Conder, a retired contrac tor, who plays the banjo; Tom Rogers plays the guitar and is retired from the Army; and Chris Spivey, on bass, is a retired farmer. The Hobnob will kick off Mon day with a free performance by a Fayetteville jazz group at the library. The Sounds of Jazz will be featured Monday at 7:30 p.m. The Hoke County Library Board will host a reception following the per formance. The public is encourag ed to attend. On Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. a piano and soprano duet called "Sweet Lovers Love the Spring" will be on tap for the library. Drama, music and storytelling will be featured Wednesday morn ing at the library from 8:30 to 11. Paula Larke, dramatist and musi cian, from Winston Salem and Carol Walters, storyteller, from Troy will enthrall the public with their performances. In addition to the Country Boys on Thursday, the Heritage Home and Site Tour will highlight the day. The tour will begin at 1:30 p.m. at the Raeford Presbyterian Church, which was the site of the old Raeford Institute, and will continue until 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $3.50. Transportation is pro vided. The Hobnob goes into full swing on Friday, starting with harp music at the library with Olive Jenkins and concluding with an auction of arts and crafts at Hoke High School. Barbecue or fried chicken will be served at the school and the Great Zucchini Washboard Band will perform. Artisans will display their wares A lunching at the Hobnob The Country Boys are warming up next Thursday's performance in McLauchUn Park beside the Hoke County Library as part of the Hoke Heritage Hobnob. The performance will be free to the public and lunch will be on sale for SI. Bring a lawn chair. on Friday and Saturday at the high school's Macdonald Gymnasium. The Embers will perform on Satur day at the ball field behind the old Raeford Armory. In addition a number of local ar tist will perform at the Macdonad Gym during the arts and crafts ex hibits. On Sunday "Picture North Carolina," a black and white photography show will go on display at the Hoke County Library. Donations are needed to keep the festival going. These in dividuals and organizations have contributed to the cause: Mr. and Mrs. Frank McFayden, Anna Jor dan, Raeford Jr. Woman's Club, Raeford Woman's Club, Raeford - Klwanls, Dr. and Mrs. Bob Nelson, Mrs. Murriel Matbeson, Art Department of Raeford Woman's Club, Mr. and Mrs. David Wanon, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillis, Mary Teague McNeill, Mrs. J.S. Johnson, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.. W.L. Lancaster, Mrs. Lorenna Upchurch, Chaminade Music Club, Sarah Leach, Dr. R.G. Townsend Jr., Howell Drug Co., Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burgess, Raeford Cleaners and Launderers, Ken and Betsy Ann McNeill, Faye Baker, Mrs. W.P. Baker, Mr. and Mrs. D.P. McFadyen, D.R. Huff, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pate, C.B. Corpora tion, Lt. Col. Arthur Hayes and Dr. Virginia Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. James Best, Dr. Lawrence Bullard, EIoIm Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Julian Johnson III, Mr. and Mrs. C.P. Klnlaw, Emma Jean Mims, Harold and Joyce Monroe, Mr. and Mrs. R.E. Nedey, Mr. and Mrs. John Pecora, Raeford Garden Club, Raeford Lumber Company, Mr. and Mrs. A.W. Wood, Burlington Industries, Western Auto Associate Store, Mr. and Mrs. John K. McNeill Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Walter Coley, Mrs. Grace An drews, Raz Autry, Mary Brown, Raeford-Hoke Chamber of Com merce, Home Food Super Market, Mrs. Robert Gatlin, Marion Gatlin, Mrs. R.B. Lewis, Edna A. McNeill, Mrs. J.C. McLean, Mary Virginia McFadyen, Mrs. H.R. McLEan, Mr. and Mrs. Nelll A. McNeill, Southern National Bank, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stone, Raeford Jaycees, Mrs. Rachel Stevens, Dr. Ramnik Zola, United Carolina Bank, Mr. and Mrs. David Howell, Hoke County Public Library, Heritage Federal Savings, Southeast Production Credit Assoc., Mr. and Mrs. T.B. Upchurch Jr., Ella Gibson, Alma Ferguson, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Maxwell, Mrs. Nell Snead, Caroline Parker, Mr. and Mrs. George M. King, Louise Sawyer, Stevie N. Sawyer, Tar Heel Hat chery Inc., Phil A. Diehl, The News-Journal, Dr. John W. Southerland, Mr. and Mrs. H.L. Gatlin, Eleanor Gentry, the Hoke County Commission, Emily Cameron and The Raeford City Council. Sullivan's 210 S.W. Broad Street Southern Pines Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 AFTER-EASTER Ladies' Dross & Casual Shoes Compare to $45 19*0.2990 3 BIG DAYS Special Group Bass "Look-A-LIko" Sandals 10,o-12*? SPECIAL GROUP Doslgnor Shoos 25% Off SPECIAL GROUP _ Children's 960-16?? Ladle*' Nlkai Comport at 26 99 Espadrillo Casuals Many Styles and Colors 13?0.1590.17?0 Special Group Bass Sandals 24?? Special Group of Candies _ Back loss Sandals 19 Compart at $30 Special Group _ Candlos Sandals 12 R*g. to $22 Special Group of Lodies' Champion Oxford Blomlshos 0'? Re9.17.99 By KEDS Intlre Stock jHon's Shoos Fr*och Shrl?\*f Nik* Jormon 15% Off Entire Stock of Men's, Women's A Children's PONY 19". 24*? R?g. 34.99
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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April 26, 1984, edition 1
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