PAGE 8 Tax Listing Tortus Issued ] Use of a special inventory form, prepared specially for businessmen bf the jaunty, will be continued, in UsUal ftp taxes this year, according Jo Tax Supervisor Berles C. John * Prepaxed by the county tax super visor. * the special inventory form has been in use for several years. It provides for listing stocks of goods machtnwfy, fixtures, motor vehicles, used in jjustness, and various other forms of personal property held in connection with operating a busi ness. ,W*. AM PROMPT RETURN • • Tax. IjJling must be made in Jan uary, R*e tax supervisor reminded buaineShtfen. He requested that in- Veiijdi’y forms, mailed to merchants and -buMhessmen of the county, be fiUecPiiwmd returned promptly to pis in Lillington. ■ should be listed at full itaSS, he said, and his office will Compute taxes on the basis of two-thirds of these figures. * elites,- Comes Oversize ‘ SPQiQINE, (UP.) A 4,200- potlhd cheddar cheese was cut for sale by “Johnston the Coffee Man,” Henry Johnston, doing some fig uring, wild if the milk in the cheese were pul into quart bottles they tVOOId reach upward four miles. - The total valuation of all prop erty to Lara mie County, Wyo., rose j from $1,786,465 in 1870 to $10,385,- 637 in 1888, according to the Uni versitytf Wyoming archives de- 1 partment. BASS Electric DIAL 3479 Contracting & Repairing 402 E. Broad St. DUNN, N. C. y JOIH OUR K [.NOW jjj/ Club l\ V -^JL — r ton 195/ j/ COMMERCIAL BANK , Z C~ “ DUNN, N. C. ’ "" rafeh , * GALA OPENING , TONIGHT 8:15 P. M. f'•' ZM J RALEIGH MEMORIAL All Vf&dT AUDITORIUM RM' \ jan. B thru 13 WSSr\h W NIGHTLY at 8:15 IV M. Saturday 2:30 & ••• ddlgfA Vr WINTER SPORTS BRILLIANT Mk ICE BALLET \ SKATING SKILL - THRILLS Y Lavish Production ... M wM And PACKED WITH COMEDY flftf/If UtfTjAi ON HUGE ' Vm 'mlinil&mm area ice rink fa waM ah' all seats reserved W $1.50, $1.85, $2.00 & $2.85 COLORED SECTION $1.50 WmmWiVl SATURDAY MATINEE LW#f\ a. RESERVED: $1.85 W mfl yr Unreserved Adults $1.25 a/,1 \ CHILDREN 60c ALL PRICES INCLUDE TAX myr, Ms COMPANY ON SALE AT WZk\ la IVEY-TAYLOR CO. Raleigh /■> DURING STORE HOURS If y yZ WALKERS VILLAGE rrJTGUMouR' ix >j RESTAURANT W TjgL jP.FRS I IS “AUTORIUM BOX OFFICE H. ” I OPENS 7P. M. DAILY” . m «*- ioMifimtU 60... THE SAFEWAY I * gmmrnmammmmma rui pi onAfl i7r>«*n» I w J vjrcv rioCCS rwHcT y P * ■>?- ~ fft While You Relax In Comfort -sSpT -jjfgP cap in The Luxurious Styling Os These Smart New Buses. D-I-A-L * SECURITY S E TRAVEI Wa ||f|lCfeai *QUICK TRIP BSnff|YTSWfJCTTTP»T?B * Tourist Dies After Wreck G. Edward Glasgow, 65, of Nor wick, N. Y., died at 2 p. m. Friday in Dunn Hospital of a cerebral hem orrhage. He was traveling through Dunn when he ’.vas involved in a traffic i accident. As a result of the accident, I both he and his wife were admitted to Dunn Hospital Nov. 16. Mrs. ; I Glasgow is still a patient in the ! hospital here. Mr. Glasgow was released from, the hospital following treatment for a few days. He was readmitted Dec, 16 with a cerebral hemorrhage. He was a retired meat store operator. The body was returned to ITorwick. N. Y. Friday afternoon, where funer al services and burial will take place. It’s Rugged in Korea DULUTH, Minn. (U.P.) PFC Arthur Beam wrote his mother from Korea: ‘‘l haven’t had a shave or bath for a month. I haven’t changed my longhandles in a month. Worst of all, I haven’t had my boots off for three weeks.” Buttons on the back of men’s formal clothes are an 18th-century heritage. Gentlemen on horseback used them to fasten back coat tails. TAR HEEL DELEGATION IN WASHINGTON—Ever since 1936, Seth Muse has been trying to get North Caro lina s Senators and Congressmen together in the nation’s capitol for a photograph. He finally succeeded the other n-T; a o d h t l re c they i are ~ t J he men from North Carolina who makes our laws. Left to right are, seated,: Senator Willis Smith, Senator Clyde R. Hoey, and Congressman Robert L. Doughton and John H. Kerr. Standing are- Congressmen Hamilton Jones, Woodrow Jones, Thurmond Chatham, Monroe Reddin; Harold D. Cooley Carl Dur ham; Graham A. Garden; Herbert C. Bonner, Charles B. Dean and F. Ertel Carlyle of this district. (Daily Record Photo by Seth Muse.) % J Car Damaged In Accident Property damage resulted from an accident in front of Mary Stew art School last night,highway pa trolmen reported today. William C. Strickland, 19, Dunn, lost control of a 1949 Plymouth sedan in getting it back on the road after running off the shoulder. He swerved to the left and' sideswiped a 1935 Chevrolet driven by Danford McLamb, 18, of Dunn Rt. 2. The car then turned over on the left side of the road. Riding in the car with Strick land were Shelton Beasley, and Charles Holmes. Mrs. A. T. Holmes is the owner of the car. Patrolman David Matthews in vestigated. UN Forces Reel ToNewPosition (Continued From Page One) coasts outdistanced their Commun ist pursuers in headlong retreat to ward Pusan. The main Bth Army cdlumn to the West at last reports was fall ing back through and may have abandoned Osan, 27 miles south of Seoul, after blowing up military installations at Suwon. A security blackout cloaked pro gress of the East Coast column, but Bth Armys Headquarters announced cryptically that UN forces there had given up their last positions north of the 38th Parallel, old border be tween North and South Korea. Four U.S. destroyers and two Thailand Corvettes bombarded en emy columns moving sooth along the East Coast in pursuit of the re treating Allied troops. | . j Allied air Korean skies in full strength of 1,000 or more aircraft as the weath er cleared after two days of low clouds and snowstorms. They con centrated their attacks on the Seoul area, but reported most Red troops in hiding. Air Corps Recalls Clarence D. Bain Lt. Clarence Dixon Bato, Jr., of Dunn and Benson has been recalled to active duty in tin. Air Forces and has reported to Maxwell Field in Montgomery, Alabama for duty. He is scheduled to be assigned to duty at Lackland Air Base to San Antonio, Texas. Lt. Bain served three years as a Tires Spurned LINCOLN. Neb. (UP.)—Here’s a new twist. A1 Williams, fanner, re ported to police that thieves made off with two wheels from his trail er, leaving the tires behind. The speed of light -was first measu*e»«fn by a Danish as tronomer named Roemer, from ob servations of the moons of Jupiter as they went Into eclipse In the planet’s.shadow. THE DAILY RECORD DUNN, N. C. Campbell Program Making Progress The current expansion program of Campbell College is making sat isfactory progress, according to in formation from college officials, and several communities expect to meet their goals before the end oth the month. On Thursday, the Neil’s Creek and Pleasant Union organization met in the Pleasant Union Church, with Chairman High Green presiding. The communities are still a iOittle short of their goal of $5,000, but they expect to reach that quota by- Jan. 15, whgn another meetlCg will be held. In Coats, the group met Friday evening at Ted Malone’s store,. with Chairman Carson Gregory presiding. The Coats group is short of Its goal of SB,OOO. Chairman Gregory Is con fident this amount can be secured by Jan. 26, when the group will again assemble and report ofi its Photo Racketeers Prey On Wives Os Overseas G. l/s By HARMAN W. NIOfOLST United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. s— ' l which can be obtained from the county farm agent. Before taxes apply to a worker, le must establish a “qualifying quar ter" by working for a farmer con tinuously lor a full calendar quarter. In the next Quarter he must be em ployed by the same farmer on a full-tlms oasis for at least 60 days and his cash wages must amount to SSO or more. Generally speaking, nfter he has served the qualifying quarter, the employee will be covered in each succeeding quarter with the same employer as long as he continues tq work at least 60 days on a full-time basis and earns cash wages of SSO or more. For hired farm workers who meet the requirements of the new law, the Government will provide the same social security benefits as for in dustrial workers. These include j monthly payments when the worker retires after reaching 65, atgi pay ments to the worker’s family when he dies. LEE'S Truck Terminal (So) 24 Hour Road And Wrecker Service PHONE-2727 2052 FAYETTEVILLE HWY. DUNN, N. C. !