Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Jan. 10, 1985, edition 1 / Page 4
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n Weeks To Come MUK aOMIU - Hoke Co. Mumc Boo?er Associ?ioo ?nihil ?? be fim Moafey night of cm) acMk ? Hoke High School hunt l nam at 7 p.m. Parents aad IHeadi of the music ? orifimi are urged to attead. NOBTHWEST WATER - All member* are invited to attead the Annual Meeting of Noith w eat Water Supply, lac. at the water office located off Vms Road behind Bute's Funeral Home, at 7 p.m. oo Jan. 14. AIRPORT AUTHORITY -The Hoke/Raeford Airport Authority will hold its regular meeting at the Raeford City Hall on the memmd Tbarsday of each month at 7:45 p.m. AMERICAN LEGION -American Legion Poet 20 of Hoke County meets the msai Taeatfay of each month at the Edin borough Restaurant at 8 p.m. Those interested in join ing are invited. COUNTY COMMISSION -Members of the Hoke County Commission meet the lint Monday of each month at 9 a.m. and the third Msadaj 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 first Monday 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 Taesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at the board offices on Wooley Street. The public is encourag ed to attend. AL ANON - Meetings are held every Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Library Conference Room. JAYCEES ? Raeford Jaycees meet the 2nd and 4th Monday of each month over Howell's Drug Company on Main Street. Anyone interested is in vited to attend. iaa. 9 SANDHILLS MENTAL HEALTH - The Finance Com mittee of Sandhills Mental Health wfll meet at fcSO p.m. at the Hoke County Unit and a tour of the Unit will be offered at 7 p.m. The Area Board will hold their regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Hoke County Commission Room. Jaa. 10 NAACP - Hoke Co. NAACP regular monthly meeting will be held Thursday, Jaa. It at 7:30 p.m. at the East Freedom Masonic Lodge Hall. All members and the public are in vited to attend. Jaa. 12 PETERKIN HONORED ?Hoke Co. Civic League will be honoring James Peter kin on Sat., Jaa. 12 at Mt. Pisgah Church at 7 p.m. The public is invited. Jaa. 17 YAM COMMISSION - The 23rd Annual Meeting of the N.C. Yam Commission, Inc. will be held Jan. 17 at the Wayne County Agricultural Center in Golds boro. Free Lunch, no registration fee. Jan. 14, 21, 2S TUTORS NEEDED - A Laubach Tutor Workshop has been scheduled for Jan. 14, 21, 28, from 6:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. in the Literacy Office on El wood Avenue. If you read well, care about people and can spare just three hours a week please telephone 875-2145. Training and materials are free. jM 18-Fefc. 3 AM ADEUS - The Fayetteville Little Theatre production of the Tony Award winning drama AMADEUS which will open Jaa. IS with a Cham pagne Premiere and will run for three weekends tfcra Feb. 3. Written by Peter Shaffer (EQUUS, KRAMER vi. KRAMER. E.T.), AMADEUS is the longest running drama in recent Broadway history. Leading the cast for this pro duction will be Mayan Weeks of Fayetteville a* the composer Antonio Sailer! and Bill Alien of Chapel Hill as Ms rival, Wolfgang Alliini Mo?rt. Katie Johnston of Chapel Hill will appear as Conctanae, Mozart's wife, for rsearv tions, piaaae cal the Little Theatre Box Offlosat 323-423) between 4 and 9 pm. after ManlMwi EUKOPKANEXirarr-One of th? largest Earopeaa at the N.C. Mm of Wstory in Raki* in the spring. "Ul?i|k ud louokt," ? rfc.ffc.lrl tM 9Juoe 6. taMM ike Moti?a sad history behind the fin! English attempts to roioaitr the new world, the stiuggks of the fin t settkrs and the dUcowk* they made. Museum boon win be exteaded. as the show is ex pected U> be very popular. Ad mission is free, and a catalogue wiO be avalable for purchase. Groups pl'wring to visit are urged to make reservations now by calling 919/733-3894. For details, contact the N.C. Museum of History, an agency of the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources, 109 E. Jones St.. Raleigh, 27611. rah. l, 2, 3 TENNIS TOURNEY - Clover field Tennis and Swim dub 1719 Middle Road. Fayet teville, North Carolina, will <{* 1*5 QaverfWd New ?*" ? Clamfc. This adult tournameot, in iu third year is sanctioned by the United States Tennis Association, the Southern Tennis Association ?nd the North Carolina Tennis Awociatioo. The tournament is ?et for Feb. 1. 2, aad 3 with a ram date set for Feb. 8, 9 and 10. Events include Mens and womens Singles and Doubles and Mixed Doubles. Entry fee 's 510 for singles, and S12 per doubles team. Entry deadline is Friday. January 25 .? 6 p.m we will not be able to accept telephone entries. Entry blanks ?re available at area tennis dubs or may be sent direct upon request. For more infor mation about the Third Annual Cloverfield New Year's Classic Tenrns tournament call f9l9i 323-4446. 1 ' March 14-16 INDIAN CONFERENCE ?Indians from across the state will gather at the Bordeaux Motor Inn in Fayetteville March 14-16, 1985, for the Tenth Annual North Carolina Indian Unity Conference. The conference sponsor. United fVmur%?f Nor,h C*rolina (U I NC), IS currently finalizing plans for the annual conference which will have as its theme, ' Memories of Our Past, Vi sions of Our Future." The'con ^registration fee will be $30 per person. The registra tion fee at the conference will be 535. Separate tickets for the banquet only will be available for $15. Persons wishing more information about the con ference should contact one of the member organizations of UTNC, which includes seven North Carolina Indian com J? unity organizations and the N.C. Commission of Indian Affairs. . ? *?* Weekend Jaa. 13 KINGS BIRTHDAY - On Jaa. 13, the Lumberton Human Relations Commission will sponsor a celebration honoring the birthday of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Guest speaker for the occa sion will be NASA Astronaut. Dr. Ronald McNair, with per formances by the sandy Grove Gospd Choir and others. Ac tivities are scheduled to begin with a press conference at 3 p.m. in the Lumberton Jr. High School Auditorium. Ju. 19 BEETHOVEN - The Fayet teville Symphony Orchestra will present "An Evening With Beethoven" on Saturday even ing, Jm. 19, at 8 p.m., in Reeves Auditorium on the Methodist College campus, Fayetteville. The performance will be conducted by Harlan Duenow, musical director of the Fayetteville Symphony Or chestra, and will be the third concert of the 1984-85 season. Tickets will be available at the door at SS for general admis sion and S3 for students, senior citizens, and military (E-l through E-3), and the public is invited to attend. For tickets or farther information call 864-3907 or 323-0492 to price crafts. Other speakers wiU cover suds topics as where to mH. recognizing quality, and how to display, package, and label crafts. The crafts i? lit is very competitive today and craftsmen must not only pro duce quality items bat use the very best marketing techniques to realue a profit. The crafts marketing ion mar, sponsored by the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service wiO be held in the Marten County Agricultural Center. Complete information and registration forms arc available from the Hoke County Exten sion Office on South Magnolia Street. Deadline for registra tion is January IS. For more in formation. contact Alice Petti tt at S7 5-2162. \ MUST BE MAGIC ~ The Per forming Arts Center's Red Balloon Children's Series wilt present "Li'l Abner" the Magi cian and His Trained Dogs on Jan. 12 at 2 p.m. at the Perfor ming Arts Center on the Pem broke State University campus. This performance will be the first in the series. The show will include magic, a balloon artist, a clown act and many tricks by the trained dogs including rope jumping, balancing on rear feel on a tight rope, and climbing double ladders. Tickets are SIO for all four of the children's events which includes a concert by Stan Bumgamer, the Ap pmtmckian State *WMfar y Young People's Theater's pro duction of "Robin Goodfellow," and "Magic Moments" with Dick Snavety. Single performance tickets are S3. One adult is admitted free with one paying child. For more information or to order tickets call the Performing Arts Center at 521-0778. Saturday Jan. 26 CLOWN DRAMA - The Moore County Arts Council's Premier Series presents its third event on Saturday, January 26 with Belov's Contemporary Clown Drama. This perfor mance begins at 8 p.m. at the Performing Arts Center. Or chestra tickets are $7 for coun cil members and $8 for non members, balcony seats are 15 for council members and $6 for non-members. "Laughing Gas With Love" is the title of the evening's program, a show lecture packed with humor, romance and intrigue. Tickets for this, the third event of the council's Premier Series, are available at the Campbell House. For more information, please call 692-4356. ABUSE WORKSHOP - The Hoke County Girl Scouts will sponsor a child abuse workshop for all girls from 5th grade through 12th grade on 26. The workshop will be held at the National Guard Ar mory beginning at 10 a.m. Parents are urged to attend the workshop with their daughters. Non Scouts are welcomed to at tend also. There will be no charge for the workshop. For further information call 875-5237 after 6 p.m. DICKENS SEMINAR - Hoke County Agricultural Extension Service will be offering a free Humanities Seminar on the topic "Charles Dickens and America" which will begin on Jan. 29. The eight -hoar seminar will meet at the Letter Building on Sooth Magnolia Street from 7-9 p.m. on Jan. 2S. Feb. 25. March 29 and April 29. The seminar will be led by Dr. Elliot Engti, Pro fessor of English at North Carotins State University and Dfnactor of Humanities Exten sion Program. Dr. Engai will ghw gamin. r participants a account of Dickens' Ife and wilting career and than explore Dicken's visits to Aawrica which M to the writing at on of hi* greatest, *et nam neglected aovd. Mm ti * Owifcidr Seminar pw tiwpff^g yg| || rcaduk| discussing the novel which Pro fessor En?d wil distribute at (he lira mwihM and collect when the seminar m-i-Lt Anyone desiring to panic ipate ia the irmtnar should call the Agricultural Baciw Service by January. 23 at 875-2162. Please help us spread the word on this seminar. MATH AND SCIENCE - Tfce N.C. School of Science and Mathematics has opened its formal 1984-85 nomination process by mailing information books and application forms to high schools throi?bout the state. The school is looking for ?bout 200 students to make up oext fall's 11th grade. Applica tions must be postmarked by Jan. 31. Applicants must the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) no later than the Jan. 26 testing date. COMMUNITY CHORUS -Efforts are being made to organize a Hoke County Com munity Chorus. Once assembl ed the adult group would per form at community events, at churches and for civic dubs. Interested adults should call John Ptummer at 875-2677. Jan. IS CLASS Of *76 - Anyone in terested in working on a com mittee for the ClafS of 1976 Class Reunion - pleare meet at the Public Library on Tuesday, Jaa. 15 at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 18-Feb. 3 COOKIE TIME ? Girl Scouts will be taking orders throughout our 20 counties beginning Jaa. 18 through Feh. 3. Cookie delivery will be Feb. 24- March 1 . Girls will also sell cookies directly from Feb. 24 through March 24. Cookies will be baked by Little Brownie Bakers, Louisville, Kentucky. There are seven varieties - all are preservative free and kosher. Cookies in Pines of Carolina Council sell for S2 per ti? I . Pft? >!? era aaad to np port troop activities and com munity projects. Troops keep 25' from each box sold. Girl Scouts in Hoke County will be knocking on your doors star ting January 18 to take your orders. Enjoy your cookies and know that you are helping girls grow. If you are not contacted by a Girl Scout and wish to order cookies, call Shirley Ferguson, 875-4473. March 1 BEEF COOK OFF - If you have a beef dish that you're particularly proud of, now is the time to enter it in the Na tional Beef Cook-Off. You could win an expense-paid trip to Wichita. Kansu Sept. 24-26 where you'll represent North Carolina and compete for a top prize of $5,000. To enter, send a typed copy of your recipe (in cluding name, address, phone number and a brief statement about the origin of your recipe) to: National Beef Cook-Off, 444 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. 60611. Entries must be postmarked no later than March 1. Recipes are judged in state-by-state com petition. Staue winners then travel to Wichita to compete in the National Beef Cook-Off. Prizes at the national level are: first place, $5,000; second place, 52,500; third place, $1,000; five honorable men tions, $300 each. Any beef recipe using chuck, round, fresh brisket, plate, shank and ground beef is eligible. All recipes must contain a minimum of one pound of beef and not more than five, and each serving must contain at least three ounces of cooked beef. Meat used must be ex clusively beef. Cooking time cannot exceed four hours. The recipe must be specific, with no use of brand names, and must state the number of servings and approximate preparation time. All entries become the property of the American Na tional Cow Belles, Inc. March 14-16 INDIAN AIT CONTEST -An art contest to recognize the talent of American Indian artists in North Carolina wffl be one of the many features of the Tenth Annual North Carolina Indian Unity Conference to be held March 14-16, at Bordeaux Motor Inn ia Fays* tevilie. The North Carofea Commission of indlaa Affairs, a member nrgnniratlmi of UTNC. will morrh? l? the contest. For more information on cooteat rales and npis tkms, contact Taram Bm man ud flt thi CQSMrilriMi P.O. Box 2722S, Raldgh, AC. 2761 1 or cal 919-73S-39M. Helping hands The fourth annual Employees' Christmas Care Drive, sponsored by employee* of Ltanbee River Electric Membership Corporation, pro vided food and Christmas toys to ItO area families, including 2i in Hoke Comity. Shown here LREMC employees -Steve Davis deft), Cartton Ftpps (center) and others load boxes of fodd for distribution to the families. Hitchcock series slated for Moore Co. Arts Center Continuing th? tradition of the very popular Classic Film Series presented last January and May, a collection of three Hitchcock films will be presented this month at the Moore County Performing Arts Center. This third edition of the Classic Film Series is entitled "Three Thrillers - The Films of Alfred Hitchcock." Movies are scheduled for three consecutive Thursdays beginning January 17. As with all council-sponsored films there are two screenings each date, - one at 3 p.m. and one at 8 p.m. Tickets are available at the door thirty minutes before each show. The Lady Vanishes starts the series on January 17. Released in 1938, this movie features a stellar cast of Margaret Lock wood, Michael Redgrave, Dame May Whitty and Paul Lucas. The next film in the series. Foreign Correspondent, is schedul ed for January 24. This spy thriller stars Joel McCrea, Laraine Day and George Sanders. The final film of the Hitchcock series, scheduled for January 31, is the classic Academy Award winn ing movie Rebecca. For more information on the arts council's Classic Film Series, please call 692-4356 or 692-3611. Soc. Security meet Jan. 14 I In January 1983 many Social Security beneficiaries in Raeford 1 and Hoke County will receive tM Form SSA-1099 which is a SocUT Security benefit statements for benefits received during 1984, Jerry C. Kizzort, Social Security manager in Fayetteville, said recently. Since this will be the first time anyone has received this kind of notice about Social Security benefits, many people may have questions about just what this^ means and how their taxes will be affected. Of course, if a single person drawing benefits had less than $25,000 outside income or if a cou ple less than $32,000, then these people who receive the forms won't have to pay taxes on their Social Security benefits. To answer questions about the? taxation of Social Securit^ benefits, KizzOrt said, there will be a "town meeting" held, through the cooperation of the City of Raeford, on Monday January 14, in the Council Room, City Hall, on Main Street, from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. All interested members of the public are invited. Squsd telling portraits Members of the Hoke County Rescue Squad are selling family portraits in an effort to raise funds to purchase a new vehicle. The portraits are $10. Photographs will be taken by ap pointment on January 26-27. For more information contact a Squad member. fib FOOO MBVHAMXSERS VAMBNCAac JACKSON'S FMA ROCKFISH RD. RAEFORD, N.C. WE ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOO STAMPS WE RESERVE ALL QUANTITY RIGHTS. Fill Your Bag With Bargains boneless!} CHUCK ROAST III 149? CUBED CHUCK STEAK * lb. MORTON POT PIES ?Biif ?CWakas ?Ttrfty REDDEUCIOUS APPLES FAMILY PACKS Sk.tr aart Sptraribf 69 4 i. HOME NAPE im JAAA PtrkSattift touM90 p*?t Fwt i. 39* N?ek Bmt %. 39* I490 UftrMhf tOfchai 890 SOUTHERN KITCHEN FLOUR 89* tiffin GRADE A LARGE WHITE EGGS 59 HUTTON DISH WASHING LIQUID 32 m. BfttU 99? 1 KETCHUP |09 *?? " v;: WALDORF BATHROOM TISSUE ???* 99* J8WS CHSP PIZZA ?ftpfWMi J 894 7j00 ajl - IM fj. *00 IA - 740 PA PRICES EFFECTIVE , THRU JAN. 12
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Jan. 10, 1985, edition 1
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