PAGE EIGHT
<%C ers Asked To
Ffjfe OPS Reports
RALEIGH, . April 20 All of
thCjjstimated 6,000 grocers in
EaWCTn North Carolina who ha>e
noCiet filed a “store group re
portHj with the Office of Price
Btdßßization here, are urged to
communicate with the ' OPS, re
quosttng the proper form for filing.
TI«3>PS is looated at 700 Tucker
StJSfcre.
fifector J. Q. Clark of the OPS
in* Raleigh reminded that the
deadline for filing of store class
ifications by grocers is April 30.
Wholesalers must file “Form 4",
Retailers must file “Form 5”, Clark
said. The forms are simple, brief
anß merely indicate the type store
operation.
Wholesalers are covered by OPS
regulation 14, big retailers by reg
ulation 15 .small retailers by reg
ulation 16.
•jßig” retailers, for purposes of
price control, have been placed in
Gis>ups 3 and 4, with annual sales
volume of more than $375,000 for
: GUARANTEED
PAINT
$2.29 GALLON
5 Gal. Can $10.99
E. BAER & SONS Dunn, N. C.
LEWIS GODWIN AND CO.
GRADING CONTRACTORS
PONDS CLEARING
BULLDOZING
D-I-A-L
2218 FREE ESTIMATES
i % SALES , Hje&Qto
i SERVICE ®
o A Big Complete Shop
i: ,24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
SEE OUR GOOD USED CARS ,
i W. &S. MOTOR CO.
ssa&s
Look how
LITTLE [ ■ ' -
it Costs!
1951 Model
_ ONLY 1
$109.95 up
hU/iH bboa^ aiwasii ' n ®. efficiencyfr ° m,opr °
Record Classifieds
CLASSIFIED
RATES
,5-Word Minimum 50c Same Ad
This Size Type ; 2c Word
3 TIMES ONLY SI.OO
This Size Type .. 3c Word
3 TIMES ONLY $1.25
ALL KEYED ADS are
strictly confidential and
no information will be
. given. Please do not ask
for it.
FOR SALE
BABY CHICKS FOR SALE
Strong and hardy chicks. New
Hampshires, Rhode Island Reds,
Barred Rocks, White Leghorns,
White Rocks, and Buff Orphing
-1950. “Small” retailers are in
groups 1 and 2, with sales volume
below $375,000 for 1950.
tons. Hatch days every Monday
and Thursday. Complete line of
poultry equipment. We sex chicks.
DUNN HATCHERY, Leon Godwin,
proprietor. Phone "2740, Dunn, N. C.
3-
EVERYTHING TO BUILD WITH-"
We Guarantee:
to furnish everything needed to
build your house—except framing
lumber. Save money, time and worry
Godwin Building Supply Co.
In Dunn. Phone 2323 or 3875.
M-W-F-tfnc
FOR SALE: 1946 Royal House
Trailer. TeVms if desired. Dial 2104
or 3365. Mickey Rouse.
4-
FOR SALE: WATER PUMPS
We have a stock of Delco Water
Pumps, Uniform Water Pumps,
Berkeley Water Pumps. If you need
a water pump, here’s an oppor
tunity for you to get one ak real
bargain prices. They’ve got to go.
McLAMB SUPPLY COMPANY.
Benson Highway. .Phone 2649. Dunn.
4-19-ts-c
FOR SALE: Red Hart wool and
nylon baby sets. Mrs. James Fair
cloth. Phone 3283. 4-20-3 t-c
AIRWAY SANITIZOR
VACUUM CLEANER
Has exclusive throwaway
bag. Most powerful va
cuum by actual test. Pay
only $6 per month. No
carrying charges. For free
showing in your home call
R. L. Godwin, Jeweler,
2000 or 2814, Dunn, N. C.
4-18-3-t-c
HELP WANTED
BRICKMASONS WANTED IM
MEDIATELY. Good pay. Must be
experienced. R. M. TURLINGTON,
CONTRACTOR, LILLINGTON, N.
C. 4-12-tfnc
WANTED: Maid by small family,
care of one child. Easy work. Good
salary to the right person. Write
to N 4 care of the Daily Record giv
ing experience and references.
4-18-4 t-p
HELP WANTED: Clean respectable
waitress. Must have experience. Best
tips on the road. Good salary. Room
and board furnished if necessary.
Call 39211. 4-16-ts-c
HELP WANTED: Girl to do general
office work. Must be able to type.
Write AC, care of the Daily Record.
4-16-ts-c '
SERVICES OFFERED*
QUALITY PRINTING at econo
mical prices at TWYFOKD PRINT
ING COMPANY in Dunn. Let us
bid on your, next order. Telephone
3271. We will call for and deliver
your work.
1-1 20 t pd.
Dunn Blue Printers
White Prints - Photo Copies
“Perfect Prints Promptly”
Over Johnson Cotton Co.
Box 83 Dunn, N. C. Phone 2342
THE DAILY RECORD Wants ccf
respondents and subscription agents
in every community within a 30-mile
area of Dunn. If your community Is
not already represented, write or
telephone The Record today.
Small gasoline engines, lawn mow
ers, pumps, etc., repaired. Call 2104.
FOR MAYOR
H
This is to announce iny
candidacy for Mayor of our
town, subject to your wishes
as voters in our coming mun
icipal primary. *'
For the past two years I
have served you as commiss
ioner for Ward Number 2. I
pledge to continue to serve
to the best of my
EAKL^G^VANN
THE DAILY RECORD DUNN. If. C.
Old Dunn Firm In New Place
IP ’B Ben s
ml" &lil f Vv" l
881 a.^ 1 J ' *"JL I M
l - i) ■■« w
fjr vJr X
STILL GOING STRONG—Shown above are' she three partners In Automotive Supply Company, which
is now operating on N. Railroad Ave. after it was burned out of a previous location. From left to right,
they are W. E. Barfield, original founder (1936) of the firm; O. M. “Mack” Hamilton and Pete Shell.
(Daily Record Photo by T. M. Stewart)
Nothing as trivial as a fire which
practically ruined their business
could keep three determined Dunn
merchants from coming back
stronger than ever.
SovW. E. Barfield, O. M. Hamil
mton and Pete Shell, oWhers of
Automotive Supply Company,
buckled down after fire struck
their shop at 122 N. Wilson Ave.
last September and found them
selves a new stand for their wares.
According to Barfield, Automo
tive Supply lost only two days
from the fire—and that time was
consumed in moving stocks from
the old place to the new one in
October.
Now the company is located In a
vast new building on N. Railroad
Ave. The stock supply has been
increased 25 per cent since the
move was made and a highly ef
ficient machine shop has been in
stalled.
BEGAN IN 1938
The business first* got under way
in .Dunn back in 1936 when Bar
field left Erwin Mills and decided
to set up shop for himself He
opened the business at 109 N.
Wilson Ave. and operated it there
until he went into the Army in
1944. The Army was no place from
which to' run a business, so Bar
field sold out.
When he left the Service in 1946
Barfield- teamed up with Maek
Hamilton and Pete Shell ana
bought his old firm back. Then it
was located at' 122 N. Wilson Ave.
Things went along fine until the
fire of 1950, which threatened to
put them out of commission.
The World War n stretch wasn’t
the first fling at Army life Bar
field took. He the Army in 1925,
staying in for three years. After
leaving the service he went to work
in Erwin Mills before opening
his business.
During World War n, when he
was called back to service, Bar
field put in 10 months in the Un
ited States and another nine in
the European Theater of Opera
tions with a quartermaster outfit.
He left the Army as a private first
class.
Bom in. Sampson County, Bar
field attended Clinton High School
He is married to the former Ruth
Pope of Dunn, and has four child
ren, three boys and a girl. V,
Barfield is a third degree Mason
and head usher at the First Bap
tist Church here.
DUNN NATIVE '■ i
Pete Shell, a Dunn native, grad-(
uated from high school here and
attended old Trinity College, now
Duke University. During World
War I he served in England,' France
and Belgium with the headquar
ters of the 119th Infantry Batta
lion, 30th Division. After leaving
the Army as & sergeant Shell
traveled with a number of dance
bands. He played a mellow trum
pet with such bands as Jan Gar
bor’s and Tal Henry’s, among
others.
Leaving the trumpet behind.
Shell took a brief try at baseball,
holding down first base for Smittf
field in the Eastern Carolina lea-
Mickey Route, 208 E. Cumberland
4 —19-3 t-c -
WANTED
WANTED: Housekeeper, white,
middleaged, live in home. Four in
family. SOO a month, board and
room. Write or call Mrs. C. O.
Jqrdan, 1309 Williamson Drive,
Raleigh. Phone 31316. 4-20-lt-p
I I
I ftortn i |CBp 8
I - I
I TADC YDI It Ifh It
i 8 8
I ' I
M v JSmMmtk ft
I tm sssu) I
gue for two years. His next move
was to work with Post offices in
(Wilmington and Dunn. He ser
ved in the finance department of
the post office here for 10 years
before going into business with
Barfield.
Shell is a past commander of
the local American Legion Post,
past senior and now trustee of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars and a
rank-and-file member of the 40 &
8. He Is also a member of the
Methodist Church here.
Shell is married to the former
Angela Lee of Dunn and is the
father of one boy and three girls.
ALSO ARMY VET <
Like his partners, Mack Hamil-
Three Face Trial
In Superior Court
Three defendants were sched
uled for trial at the May tenh of
Harnett Superior Court during the
regular session of Judge H. Paul
Strickland’s Recorder’s Court In
| Dunn Thursday.
James Preston Baker, 19, of
Lillington, Rt. 1„ was bound over
on a charge of stealing a 1937 Ford
in Dunn and was placed under
SSOO bond.
According-to local poHce, young
' Baker ' allegedly stole the car in
Dunn Sunday night, drove to Lill
ington .then took another car for
the drive back to Dunn.
John V. Jemigan, 24, of Dunn,
Rt. 3 appealed to Superior Court
after being handed a 12-month road
term for possession of illegal
whiskey and the apparatus for
making it. His bond was also set
at SSOO.
GETS 90-DAY TERM
A knife scrap brought a 90-day
road term for 68-year-old James E.
Pollard, Negro, of 402 E. Vance
St. Pollard appealed to the higher
court and was placed under S2OO
bond. Pollard was charged with
stabbing John Ray in the neck
with a knife.
Sylvester Graham of Bolton, Rt.
1, accused of false pretense for
putting up collateral he didn’t
own for fertilizer and other goods
sold him on credit by Johnson
Cotton Company, was taxed costs
and ordered to redeem his pledge.
The amount was set at $236.81.
Union Heads
(Continued From Page One)
and said a red-headed woman
labor leader was arrested yester
day .for using abusive language to
a non-striker.
Bert Gammon, a Dan River Mill
worker, told police that shots were
fierd into his home early today.
Gammon said a shot also was fired
“V* ; '*• ’' t\
SO THAT THERE WILL BE NO MISUNDERSTAND
ING AS TO MY POSITION ON THE CITY MANAGER
ISSUE, I AM STATING BELOW FOR PUBLIC
RECORD EXACTLY WHAT I FAVOS: ,*
I am WHOLEHEARTEDLY in favor of the City Manager, form
of government.
Mr. R. Thomas Hobbs Is a fine, reputable and well educated
yang man, however, I do not feel that bis retention as City
Manager vould be best far the Town of Dann or for Mr. Hobbs.
fj#”- . f
t .1 M reelected I shall make a motion at the first —sottim of
the now Board to retain Mr. Hobbs ms City Manager until ho to
recalled to active duty with the Navy, PROVIDED, ha to
recalled prior to June 15, 1951. In the event he Is not recalled
Iptor to June 15, I*6l, he to to be relieved of him duties aa City
, ‘ /
;■ ■ I
*4 it ' . .
B. A. BRACEY
..A ‘ > ~ ,y- -^Mvjh-1
ton is an Army veteran, serving
three years with the Army in 1942.
He left the services as a sergeant
in December, 1945 after spending
29 months in the China-Burma-
India Theater.
A native of Troy, in Montgomery
County, Hamilton graduated from
Mingo School after moving to
Sampson County. He worked for
the Ford motor dealer in Dunn for
seven years before going into the
Army in 1942. He is a member of
the Methodist Church, the Am
erican Legion and the Veterans of
Foreign Wars. Hamilton married
the former Lillian Warren of New
ton Grove and is the father of a
boy and a girl.
Angus McNeill Os
Bunnlevel Dies
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 3 p.m. for Angus Mc-
Neill of Bunnlevel, Rt. 1, who died
at Highsmith Hospital, Fayetteville
about 9:30 Thursday night.
The service wil be conducted
from the home by the Rev. T. A.
Guiton of Lillington. Burial will
follow in Lillington Cemetery.
Mr. McNeil is survived by his
widow, Mrs. Nola McNeill; four
daughters, Mrs. Flora MoNelll of
Lilington, Rt. 2; Mrs. Walter Wood
of hte home; Mrs. Tommy John
son of Erwin; and Mrs. Jack. Webb
of Lillington; and one brother,
Hector McNeill of Lillington, Rt. 2.
into his parked car.
Another mill worker, Noah Myers
of Triangle, reported that a shot
gun blast tore off the front door
of his home while six people were
in the front room last night. No
one was hurt.
Officers said King Glaise, a
Negro millworker, told them he
found a bundle of explosive be
neath his home. His brother, Will
iam,' discovered a stick of dynamite
with a charred fuse beneath. his
car.
Lillian Yadon, a CIO official
from the Louisville, Ky„ Joint
board of the union, was arrested
yesterday outside the gates of
the huge Dan River plant. Of
ficers said Johnnie D. Watlington,
a non-striker, complained that she
used “abusive language” when he
crossed a picket line.
Miss Yadon was freed on SSO
bond, and scheduled to face trial
In recorder’s court May 8.
START YOUR SAVINGS
AT
COMMERCIAL
BANK
Dunn, N. C.
Plans Finished
For ROAUS Meet
Plans have been completed for
the two-day conference of the
North Carolina division of the Re
serve Officers Association of the
United States, to be held here May
5 and 6, according to Joe Mc-
Cullers, general chairman of the
conference committee.
McCullers said that Harold D.
Cooley of Nashville, Congressional
representative from the Fourth
District, will make the main ad
dress at a banquet scheduled ■ to
begin at 7 p. m. May 5 at the Arm
ory here.
Also "expected to be on hand at
the banquet are MaJ.-Gen. Roy
A. Robinson of the U. S. Marine
Corps, Adj.-Gen. J. Van B. Metts
of the North Carolina National
Guard unit, Col. Redding F. Perry
of Raleigh, commanding officer of
the North Carolina Military Dis
trict, and others.
Presiding will be MaJ. Coyte Min
ges of Rocky Mount, president of
the State ROAUS unit.
. MdCullers said that between..4oo
and 500 officers and wives are ex
pected to attend the annual con
ference here. He asked that local
merchants display flags on May 5
and “let courtesy to the visiting
officers and their wives be the
theme of the day.”
BAND TO APPEAR
The chairman added that a par
ade set for May 5 will include a
100-piece Marine Corps band and
a 155-MM “Long Tom" cannon.
Membership of the various com
mittees taking part in arrange
ments for the conference were also
announced by McCullers. They
are;
Housing: Maj. Roy J. Brown,
chairman; Keith Finch and O. O.
Manning.
Registration: Herman P. Green,
chairman; R. P. Leake.
Banquet: Ed Galloway, chair
man; Frank Belote and Glenn
White..
Dancer Tom Lanier, chairman;
M. O. Phillips.
Program: John H. Blackman,
chairman; Jim Davis and Dr. W.
B. Hunter.
Welcome: I. R. Williams, chair
man; Dr. Charles Byrd and Dr.
C. E. Roberts.
Decorations: Donald Ldngdon,
chairman; Kie Hudson and C. R.
Williams.
Transportation: C. M. Watson,
chairman; Bill Corbin.
Host: George F. Blalock, chair
man; Willard Mixon.
SOMERVILLE, Term. (UP) — If
anyone asks “seen Mr. Ex?,” they
are looking for J. B. Summers, ex
superintendent of schools, ex-mag
istrate, ex-state senator, ex-mas
ter of the local Mapopic Lodge and
,exhead of other groups, ’
AT .
AUTO SALES & SERVICE
Company in dunn «
SUPER DeLUXE s' ,
1947 Ford V 8 Four-Door Sedan
1946 Pontiac Four-Door Sedan ,
1948 Pontiac Silver Streak '
1946 Ford V 8 Deluxe Tudor
FULLY-EQUIPPED ?
1949 fori V 8 Custon Infer
1948 Four-9oor Chevrolet Sedai*
1942 ttenriet Club tap
All Os These Cars Are Offered At
• , \ . .'t* • ’ • r ■ '
Sensationally-Low Prices
SEE THEM TODAY- ACT AT ONCEf
THEY WON'T BE HERE LONG!
• Mi: *
A IIVA Jp Bfc ~ A ABIA
BL IIIIIi aaLfesr JaWil
twrmmmu raw w
■
AD ■■ mb MkW* AA AA A A ABAA B
FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1951
Buie's Creek Man J
Dies On Thursday
John H. Berghauser, 83, of Buie’s
Creek died suddenly Thursflta
morning at the home of ms
daughter, Mrs. I. K. Stafford, in’!
Buies Creek.
The body was shipped to Ash- f
ville and funeral services will be
held Saturday afternoon at 4 pin.
at Chunn’s Cove Baptist Church.
Burial will be in Lewis Memorial
Cqmetery.
He was a native of Fulton, Mo.,
but had spent most of his life in
Nevada. Mo. He came to Buie’s
Creek in 1947 to make his hM
with his daughter. He was a shlß
metal manufacturer and also a
poultry man. He Was active in
the Baptist Church and had serv
ed as Sunday school superinten
dent at various churches.
He is survived by one son, Roger
I. Berghauser qf Maltimore, Md„
one daughter, Mrs. I. K. Stafford
of Buie’s Creek; one brother, Albert
S. Berghauser, Tampa, Fla.; one
sister, Mrs. Catherine B. Holt, Ful-.
ton, Mo., nine grandchildreff; and
one great-grandchild. wi
MAYOR
I respectfully aiinouncl
my candidacy for the offi<*
of Mayor of the Town #f
Dunn, subject to the wishes
of the voters in the munjA
pal primary on Monday, Ap-'
ril 30th.
Your vote and active sup
port will be greatly apprec
iated. '
HERMAN NEIGHBORS *