PAGE EIGHT
B fyiuihj. ssucd fihi&pk
mt BY LOIS BYRD
lAp. /an Smith Rickman. Ul
linffcn woman, considers herself
fortunate to have had ail seven of
a# children and grandchildren
m. her on Mother’s Day. They
were Fannie BeUe Smith
dfcpuina. Miss Mabel Smith of
(JOttiilmi ii Mr. and Mrs. Thurston
Smith and three children of Angier,
Mrt.and Mrs. T. L. Caviness and
HtoVaons of Chalybeate Springs,
Mr. and Mrs. W F. Smith and two
daughters of Chalybeate Springs,
Mr,.and Mrs. Craig Smith of Lil
liogUm, Rt. 2, Mr. and Mrs. Eug
ene; Tingen of Fuquay Springs.
Hgcently Mrs. Rickman also had
a reunion at her home, of her
toothers, the Rev. R. R. Lanier of
Alexandria, Va., and the Rev. John
Lanier of Stantonsburg. The Vir
ginia minister had been holding a
revival in his brother’s church and
brothers and sisters of his family
who joined him here were 8. A.
Lanier, Lillington, T. T. Lanier and
W. Fulton Lanier of Buie's Creek;
Mrs. C. E. Abernathy of Fu
wT Springs. Rt. 1, and her
daughter, Miss' Mary Frances Ab
ertutthy: and Mrs. H. Y. Smith of
neat Broadway.
Mrs. Inez Harrington and mem
bers of her staff are busy making
ready new jury lists from which
jurors will be drawn for the Sep
tember term of court. Around 14,000
names from the tax scrolls of 1950
wUl.be selected for the two jury
boxfs. The names already in the
ba* from which the current jurors
haw been taken will be destroyed.
Miss Lorraine Vail, county home
ageSt, said today that she had
found most women in the county
busy this week picking garden peas
strawberries for use in the
ffemcr lockers. This method of pre
senfttlon, she noted, is particularly
suffid to these two types of foods
andT this deep freeze units have
Louisiana Mother Says -
Housework is Much Easier
at -
- iW •
f'wji /?,. I H
-Ki - - kM *' bms.
, Mrs. Leo Picard, Chun* Potat,
Louisiana, is mighty proud of her
‘JW» daughters. Wilma Jean. 5
; wears old, and Juanita Mane, 4.
: She says it’s a full-time job just
. keeping track of them. It wasn t
[W tog ago when it was all Mrs.
: Picard could do to just barely
; get her work done. Now aD that
ST changed ... now that she has
beentaktac HADACOL, soy Had
acol seemed to be what Mrs
Ftjskrd needed and Hadacol may
'brine you the relief you are seek
jng if your condition is due to I
JjgSc of Vitamins Bw B* Niacin
' Why HADACOL Gives
Such Hat Results , ,
HADACOL does not bring Just
mptomatic relief. HADACOL
now maks it possihls to actually
fSte*e the anueot vague aches
apd gains, certain nervous dis
tiSfcwrwt m£* jw*r*
VajUfaM K, &, Niacin and Iron
pot
SSs rf Ste Vitamto h bT£
*•0 physical fitaaas, y,,,. j
HADACOL t comes id special
DUNN PHARMACY
just about made canning these two
good items a thing of the past.
Dunn Student
Contributes
To Yearbook
GREENVILLE, May 17—Student
members at East Carolina College
of the Beta Kappa Chapter of Pi
Omega Pi. national business edu
cation fraternity, have just issued
their IXO-1951 yearbook in a spe
cial anniversary edition. Dedicated
to Dr. E. R. Browning, director of
the college business education de
partment, "Beta Kappa News" ap
pears on the fifteenth anniversary
year of the establishment of the
department at the college.
Patricia Sutton of Kinston, his
torian of the college chapter of
Pi Omega Pi, headed the editor
ial staff which prepared the year
book. Faculty advisors who assisted
in planning the book are Dr. Aud
rey V. Dempsey and Lena C. Ellis.
The publication is now being dis
tributed among both students and
alumni members of Pi Omega Pi.
“Beta Kappa News” is a bound
mimeographed book containing, 105
pages of printed matter and a var
iety of illustrations. It is bound in
paper covers with printed titles and
decorations.
Special features of this year’s
edition, the eighth annual puubli
cation. are a series of drawings used
as introductions to the subject div
isions. a full-page drawing of Dr.
Browning by Howard Williams of
Elm City, and photographs illus
trating activities of the organiza
tion during the past school year.
Student contributors to the vol
ume include Jane Albritton, Snow
Don’t Be a "Doabtfaifl Thomas"
After reading about Mrs. Pi
card’s wonderful experience with
HADACOL—bow can you doubt
that this great new nutritional
formula will help you if your
system lacks Vitamins 8,. B* Iron
and Niacin?
What HADACOL did for lift
Picard it may do for you if you’re
troubled with vague aches and
pains, certain nervous disturb
ances, insomnia when due to an
upset stomach, stomach distress,
and a general run-down, weak
ened condition when they are due
to deficiencies of Vitamins R. B»
Niacin and Iron.
So what are you waiting for7
Don’t you see that HADACOL is
the kind of product you need—
the kind you should buy and the
kind you should start taking im
mediately! ,
Sold On o SMSct Money-Bach
HADACOL even helps build op
the bemotf obin content of your
blood (when Iron is needed) to
course through your body, ear*
tying these great health-build
ing elements to every body organ.
No wonder HADACOL help# you
feel wonderful.
Be fair to yourself! Give your
self a break it you have such de
ficiencies! Why continoe to drew
yourself around—a burden to
yourself and your family—when
relief may be at hand as
1 S 3 50 - **%
ire
Negro School
Groops Named
County Superintendent of
Schools C. Reid Roes today an
nounced the list of advisory com
mittees for the county’s 10 Negro
schools.
Committees recently named by
the 'county board of education
are designed to link their commu
nities more closely with, the
schools and to confer with the
county superintendent about gen
eral school conditions.
Schools with their committees
include: Harnett County Training
School. Dunn: Rhonnie Goodman,
Dunn, Rt. 5; Wesley Smith and
one yet to be named;
Erwin: Isaac Grady. Erwin. Rt.
1; Arthur Rowland, Coats, Rt. 1;
and James Covington. Erwin.
Shawtown (Lillington): Lee
Prince, Broadway: A. B. McLean,
Lillington; and Mack McKoy. Jr.,
Lillington, Rt. 2.
Johnson ville: Sam Brinkley.
Cameron. Rt. 2; Arden McLean,
Olivia; and Foster Murchison,
Olivia.
Norrington: H. H. Gilmore,
Lillington, Rt. 2; M. J. McKoy,
Lillington. Rt. 1; W. M. Campbell,
Lillington. Rt. 2;
Ridgeway: J. C. Chalmers,
Broadway. Rt. 1; Archie Cameron,
Jonesboro Heights, Rt. 6; Willie
Swann. Jonesboro Heights, Rt. 6.
Cedar Grove: W. H. McKoy,
Lillington, Rt. 1; London McLean.
Lillington. Rt. I; and Harver Wal
len. Lillington. Rt. 1.
Angier: N. C. Matthews, Varina,
Rt. 1; Vernon Stewart, Angier; G.
W. Wright, Angier.
Bethlehem: Wilson Dewar. Ben
ton Pegram and Frank Chapion,
all of Fuquay Springs, Rt. 1;
McLean’s Chapel: Weldon Mc-
Lean, and C. B. McLean, Bunn
level. Rt. 1; and James E. Mc-
Dougall, Erwin, Rt. 1.
Fred E. Lucas
On Destroyer
Frederick E. Lucas, yeoman, sec
ond class. USN. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Perry Keel Lucas of 201 South
11th St.. Erwin, N. C„ is serving
with United Nations forces in the
Korean area as a crew member
aboard the destroyer USS Lind.
The Lind operated with Task
Force 95 during a Naval siege on
Hill, president of the Beta Kappa
Chapter; Charles Edwards, Lewis
ton; Mattie Faye Brown, William -
ston; Emma Dean Calfee, Belhav
en: Shirley Pilkinton. Smithfleld;
Robert Chick, Rocky Mount; Clau
dius Altman. Dunn. Allan Dor
man, Portsmouth. Va.: Mary F-Ona
Bripson. Fayetteville; and Cleon
Avery Lincke. Cove City.
FOR SALE
8 USED HARNETT COUNTY
SCHOOL BUSES
Authorized for sale at prices rang
ing from—
sso. to $l5O.
by the Division of Purchase and Con
tract and the State Board of Educa
tion.
Bases are located at the Haraitf
Couaty School Garage for yoor In
spection. No hoses are gearanteod.
:- TERMS OF SALE
CASH - First Come First Served
VV'I: - ’ ‘ Vt
mb c ii iinnn
J/ ( JjH
County Garage
PV * flalla __re Rfl ; V
Wl ;. ullmgton, N. C*
• .
THE DAILY RECORD. DUNN, N. C.
FAR EAST GENERAL REVIEWS WACs
...» 1 j ‘1 I I |
Ur iflJ.'ivh
pajp j 1 I I
Mm MuM t Kyjl I * I
|
THE FOUR-STAR INSIGMA signifying Us new rank drapes the platform
from which Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, Supreme Commander in the Far
East, reviews members of the Women’s Army Corps as they parade in
Tokyo during ceremonies marking the 9th Anniversary of the Wacs.
Beside him is Mrs. Ridgway, who made her first public appearance in
Tokyo. Next to her is Maj. Helen Brecht, of Crook, Colo. (International)
Dunn High Seniors
Will Present Play
“Chicken Every Sunday,” a
comedy from the book by that
name by Rosemary Taylor. W U
be presented by the Dunn High
School senior class on Friday
250 miles of Korea’s northeast
coast recently. In this operation,
the force directed intensified bom
bardment into shore installations
at Wonsan, Sogjin and Chonjin,
destroying communist shore em
placements and serving Ned supply
lines in those areas. a
Tlie concentration ofjflkval fire
power continued tarouMKfr and
foul weather, with enemy fortifi
cations exposed at night by brilliant
star-shells. The task group lobbed
an average of one_high-explosive
•shell every minute WllEiliiMhe city
'limits during the blasting of Won
san. , o,
i evening. May 25th. at 8 o’clock in
; the high school auditorium.
I The cast for this play, directed
i by Miss Ronnie Lee, includes Joy
' Belt as MTs. Lawson. Jeffrey
Lawson. Franklin Giles, Miss Gil
ley, Jeanne Goff, Mr. Willard,
Jessie Franklin Tart, Emily Black
’ man, Nancy Jemigan, Evie May,
. Lois Johnson. Jake. T. B. Wll
-1 liams. Oliver. Abe Elmore, Ruthie,
; Adelaide Coats, Carlos, Dalwyn
. Suggs. Rosemary, Janet Jackson.
Clem, W. M_ Suggs. Miss Sallye, Pol
ly Pope, Jim Blackman, Howard
ly, Rita Kirby, Dalphine Hawley.
George Kirby, Jerry Lewis, Harold,
Stacy Johnson, Reverend Wilson,
Brother Monds. Millie Moon,
Ernestine Pearson.
The entire action of the play
takes place in the living room of
the Blackman’s home in Tuscon,
; Arizona. The time is 1916.
Lawn Party Held
For Benson Girl
Scout Troop 2-5
Members of Girl Scout Troop
2-5 es Benson were entertained
at a lawn party Friday afternoon
by Barbara Woodall, mascot, at
the home of the mascot’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Woodall.
A lace covered table placed on
the lawn was centered with an ar
rangement of spring flowers. Aux
iliary tables were also centered
with mixed spring flowers.
The little hostess and her
mother, assisted by Miss Arlene
Parnell, served iced drinks, open
-faced andwiches, pecan wafers,
ice-box cookies, and salted nuts.
Miss Mary Britton. Girl Scout
leader, whose marriage to Junius
Morgan of Benson will take place
in June, was presented a gift of
crystal in her chosen pattern.
Present were Misses Gwendolyn
Johnson, Patricia Gregory. Julia
Ellis, Mavis Phillips, Leona John
son, Sarah Adams, Lois Barefoot,
Catherine Parrish. Sarah Ellen
Whittington, and the leader. Miss
Mary Britton. A special guest was
Mrs. W. Jefferson Barefoot.
4-H COUNTY COUNCIL
OFFICERS
Among the new 4-H county
council officers is a very outstand
ing 4-H meinber from Benhaven.
Miss Lorena Pace who has recently
won other honors was elected sec
retary. Joanne Ennis of Coats,
President; and Billy Langdon re
porter.
I EE'S
Track Terminal
I 24 Hour Road
[I w #
II Service
II waw mrgt
H nM»j
Harmony Church
Women's Societv
Holds M^etina
The Woman’s Missionary Society
of Harmony Baptist Church met
May 11 at 8 p. m. at the home a!
Mrs. A. L. Wilson, with 18 mem
bers present.
Mrs. George Bonders, the presi
dent, had charge of the devotional,
the topic of which was “many
Women Ministering”. The scrip
ture, taken from the 27th chapter
of Matthew, and was read respon
sively. with prayer by Mrs. Claude
Graham, the pastor’s wife.
Mrs. A. L. Wilson- had charge
of the program,” Women Under
girding the Spread of the Gospel,”
and several interesting talks were
made on what women in other
countires are doing in mission
work.
After the program and business
session a social hour was enjoyed
and refreshments were served by
the hostess.
BIRTHDAY PARTY
Mrs. Robert Tart entertained at
a birthday party Thursday after
noon honoring her daughter, Patsy.
The party was held on the lawn
where a series of games was direct
ed by Mrs. P. D. Lucas.
The hostess, assisted by Mrs. A-
R. Johnson and Mrs. Marshall
Woodall, served ice cream, cake
and candy.
Ouests included Anne Pollock
Johnson, Rohin Vann, Pat Lang
don, Maurilla Allen, Barbara Wood
all, Gloria Allen, Sandra Hudson,
Joy Barbour, Joyce Pearce, Elaine
Parker. Faye Parker, Charlie Wood
all. Charles Johnson, David Wood,
Bill Woodall, Jackie Barbour, Don
Parker, John Charles Woodall, Van
Parker, Pat Holmes, Mike Can
aday. Arnold Holmes, and from
Erwin J"lie and Joey Denning.
HARMONY PERSONALS
Miss Ruby Jaekson, who under
went an appendicitis operation at
Dunn Hospital last week, is able
to be out again.
Pfc. Rex OBriant, who is sta
tioned at George Air Field base in
California, arrived home yester
day to spend some time with his
mother, Mrs. Lonie OBriant.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Frazier,
Betty Lou Frazier and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Newton spent Sun
day in Oxford with relatives.
Mrs. A. L. Wilson had as her
guests for Mother’s Day her daugh
ter Mrs. Irma Breglin, of Shelton,
Conn.; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Star
ling of Fayetteville, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Kirby, also of Fayette
ville. and her son Robert Wilson
and family of Lillington, Rt. 3.
George Wicker, Earl Cash and
Jimmie Lanier spent the weekend
at Holden’s Beach.
Hefbre you buy ANY range, see the NEW
mm Wfestinghouse °
wmia^HWW-3MME T 'CBMWBg aan nun sns
ARED HOT
\ ...W wwi, W*» slsdrlrl J
30 SECONDS -
p°Jl NEWI The SUPER SPEED COROX
| ‘ w Unit is the fastest beating unit on the
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NEW! Tba naw Weatinghouaa
4 1§- MIRACLE SEALED OVEN lives up
v to No man sir drafts to dry
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LOOK, SEE, COMPARE I
Just cioss tbs door of a WatHnghoiiss
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I | 1 Westinghouie door Hwa a solid feel which
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I EVERY feature of this range. You’D
love the versatile Two-Level Speed
Hi tbs Colar-Glanc* Controls
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dp
.
McLEOD HARD ARE CO#
“YOUR DEALER FOR WESTINGHOUBE APPLIANCES” > -
MOVED tO WALLACE T ?
Rev. and Mrs. Nisbet who served
as pastor and his wife of Olivia
and Barbecue Presbyterian Church
es for the past two years, moved
Tuesday to Wallace, where he has
accepted a call to Rock FbtvWill
ard and PoU’s Memorial Predby
terian Churches.
A native of Lee County, Rev.
Mr. Nisbet attended Davison Col
lege and the Union Theological
Seminary at Richmond, Virginia.
The Olivia and Barbecue churches
were his first pastorates. He ser
ved Saint Andrews as supply past
or two summer’s while in school.
During the two year* Rev. Mr.
Nisbet served as pastor of these
( At Yonr favorite thorns or* coming... and your
rodio » boro ' a new oodd General
M Electric-—see it today! •
r u> fee and nine. Other
/ \ deluxe G-E features hi due low-priced
l/* 1 • model ... powerful superhet circuit.. .
Ikil • Beasnaecope aoteoaa .. . odds no aerial
"Or ground . , . AC-DC. Performs beaud
WELLONS MERCANTILE
COMPANY INCORPORATED
SO. WILSON AV. DUNN. V
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1951
oldest Presbyterian churches tottm
' state is now in the process of ping
l remedied and new class room*
1 *****
■' • .
- He manned the former Shirley
Burnside of Masoen West Virginia.
TOrhave many Wends throughout
this entire section who wish them
1 much success in their new location
add in the service of the Master.
i •'
Farm operators and assistants
. have been added to the Nto of.
. critical occupations by the “ 8.
i Labor Department. * ’