PAGE EIGHT Teen Tattle Tales By LINDA AYCOCR Woody Hin and Billy Ray God win spent the weekend at Carolina Beach. Bay, boys, do the girls down there compare with Laney and Margaret Lee? Wouldn't It be a shame if Charles Maynard forgot to stop by Joyce’s house one day while on his paper route? Everybody had a super time at Anne Byerly’s “back to school” dance last Thursday- night. Nine j couples enjoyed the evening danc ing and eating. 1941: We were broke, so we lived op hamburger for a week! 1951: We lived on hamburger for a week—we’re broke. When I started to work, I used to dream about getting the salary I’m Starving on now. Our former Frances Harrell has now entered the sea of matrimony and we wish her smooth sailing form here on out. Ronnie Kimmell is now looking f r the most eligible girl in town Who is tops on your list, Ronnie? It seems as though all of the boys are crazy about Laney Hodges, but she has her eye on only one of them. Right, Woody? . There were plenty of excited damsels in Dunn yesterday when all the fellas’ in the National Guard came home fi im maneuvers, iim sure the boys are bubbling ov er with hilarious happenings dur ing these two weeks of army life. .Betsy Lee: HI came in to make an appointment with Dr. Hooper." Melrose Lee: “He’s out just now, but—” Betsy Lee: “Thank you. When will he be out again?” Labor Day week-end brings to a cloae another glorious summer of fun and frolics for the younger set. A few of the gang took ad vantage of the beaches and soaked up the remaining rays of ole Sol. Mr. Burrage has the band in tip top form to play for the opening ’ of school Wednesday morning. We . have many new members and have all worked hard. The Youth Choir of the Baptist Church is having a reorgan ization al meeting Thursday night at 7:00. Come out and let Mr. and Mrs. Smith teach you to sing. Virgil Early now has ajob deliv AN AUTOMATIC UCCTRIC RANCH This month the 100,000th electric range will be installed in the area served by : this Company. There J are many reasons for such popularity of electric cooking you will see scores of them when you If , see the new automatic electric ranges in the elec trical stores. . \ ; ~ I See your Electric Dealer now! I (CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANYJ V . , ering groceries. That's one way to get around to see your girl, Virgil. Frank Spruill add Robert Pope seem to be spending a lot of time on West Divine Street. I wonder why! i Mayo Is back at W. F. hard at work with the football team. Guess we’ll have to root for Wake Forest this year, with such a home town star on the team. Several of Dunn's popular young men will attend the gala Debutante Ball in Raleigh, Sept. 7. Sorry we can't be there, boys. Robert Hodges b as cute and witty os ever. Fall Fashion Notes: \ Corduroy and more corduroy in | skirts, jackets, weskits and dress- j es. Luscious colors too. such as royal purple, gold, bronze, copper j and browns. Beautiful plaid ginghams for; early school wear. The new coat dress, with or with out belt. Wool jersey shenlhs with large steles for semi-di ess-up. Lovely nylon and cashmere* sweaters with socks dyed to match. Skirts either full or slim to suit the figure. Loafers and giiillies for school: iileli pumps for dressier occasions. In fact, everything a young girl’s heart could desire to make her more beautiful. iWell, I can dream, can’t I?) Will see all you guys ar.d gals j Wednesday morning at 8:30 sharp, j Better set your alarm clocks!!! [ Man Comes Long Ways, But Gets The Top Dollar Dunn's tobacco market i s drawing farmers from far and near—and they’re going away well pleased. Among the satisfied sellers this morning was Albert Ed- I wards, who lives 40 miles on the other side of Danville, Va. MV. Edwards sold 2500 pounds this morning at Buck Currin's Big-4 warehouse for $1550, an average of slightly more than 64 cents per pound. Both Currin’s Warehouse and Dick Owen’s Farmers’ Ware house had big sales today. ■SB JBk liwii a PRACTICING IN FAYETTEVILLE Dr. Joseph W. Baggett, ' son of Mrs. J. R. and the late State Senator Baggett of Lill- I ington, who has begun the practice of medicine in Fayetteville. ' He is associated with Dr. Dave M. Cogdell in the practice of obstetrics ! and gynecology. (Daily Record photo by T. M. Stewart). State Is Leader In Training Scientists RALEIGH, State College has : become one of the leading world centers for training agricultural scientists of Marshall Plan coun tries. This was revealed today by Dr. I. O. Schaub of the .college’s School of Agriculture when he announced that 40 foreign scientists have stu died the latest American methods in agricultural education, research and extension here this summer. 1 Dr. Schaub, former dean of the THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN. N. C. i. ~ „ —— - ■ - 1 • School of Agriculture and now con sultant in charge of the visitor’s J schedules, in announcing State Col- ' lege’s contribution in the fight to check the spread of international communism, calls the program a “two-way exchange of ideas." They They learn from us by observing our practices, he says, while we learn much from the information j they bring us. They are a part of some 3,000 , foreign educators, research workers I and governmental administrators' who will have studied this year In the United States under the Econo- : mic Cooperation Administration’s I foreign visitation program. The program is designed to serve as , part of the technical aid phase of I the Government’s foreign rehabili- 1 tation program. SPONSORED BY DEPARTMENT j Representing educational research ' and governmental Institutions of j Marshall Plan countries, their vis its to the leading educational and research centers of America' are co-sponsored by the State Depart ment and Agriculture Department. •Because United States land grand colleges and universities of fer the only national system of ag ricultural research, education and extension, they offer excellent cen ters of study for foreign represen tatives, says Dr. Schaub. Wuai incy learn here will be carried home and put to use in improving their country’s agriculture and economic conditions. At State College, they have studi ed In every department In the School of Agriculture for periods ranging from a few days to three months. Their studies have includ ed class work, laboratory and test farm study, and close work with the State College Extension Ser vice. Dr. Schaub says they usually stay in the United States from three months to a year, depending on their course of study. State College is expecting the arrival of some 100 more by next summer. SPITTOONS RULED OUT COLUMBIA, S. C. (IB From now on, -tobacco-chewers riding trains, in South Carolina will to grin and bear it. Gov. James F. Byrnes signed a bill repealing a provision that railroads must fur nish one spittoon for evqry two seats on passenger trains. Order while the supply is plenti ful and the price is cheap. NORRIS FUEL CO. DUNN | {Farmers Face ! Big Problem In Production RALEIGH. Farmers now face the double-barreled problem of making their land produce heavi ly and at the same time keeping it In good condition for future high j production. Best way to do this, says G. T. | Scott, State PMA director and j chairman of the State Agricultural Mobilization Committee, is for farmers'to make greater use of winter crops, green manures, and improved grass and legume produc tion. In this way, he says, they will be protecting and oulldtng their soil while also providing in- i creased feed for livestock. State goals for fall-seeded grains, ( announced today by Scott, are 450.- | 000 acres of wheat, 525,000 acres of oats. 50,000 acres of barley, and ! 16,000 acres of rye. All these acre- 1 ages are on a planted basis except rye, for which tne goal is given on a’, harvested basis. The Slate goals have been brok en down by counties and will be: publicized locally in each county. 1 ■ Maintenance in 1832 of the 1951 large acreages for many important i crops, including wheat, and the ’ expansion of feed production will again place heavy demands upon I American farms and their soil re- 1 i sources." savs Chairman Scott. ■Each year this happens, it be ' comes increasingly important that concern be shown about the future ability of our land to produce suf ficiently to fill requirements of the growing population. It becomes necessary, therefore, that 1952 crop production be undertaken with the I widest possible use of those prac tices which are known to increase production while building the soil resources for still more intensive tu'jre use. . . “There never has been a grwiter need for more winter cover crops, green manures, and improved grass and legume production, both be cause of the need for protection and building of the soil and be ■ cause of the need for increased I feeding of livestock.” Scott adds. ! Foreigners may think that Amer icans are bath crazy, but they do admire our bathtubs. A modernistic U. S. bathroom has been flown to’lbn Saud of Arabia at a cost of $15,0000. * HS lifg IM BBL !If THE FORDOMATK FORD GIVIS YOU I iwfilrta B m an entirely new kind of drivinoi OUTfjfjES igjgH THEM All* tT ■ Bl ■ ■ ■ ® Combines best features of previous drtvesi Fordomatie gives you two automatic drives, in on* —a torque converter for smoothness—and auto - ' matic gears for get-ap-and-GO and gas savings. 9 *' iust rhe power YOu when yau need and trim subject to change without *~Hce. Practically drives Hseir. Fordomatie thinks for you. It automatically provides a countless number of ratios through which engine power is fed to the rear wheels— automaticaHy adjusts the ratio as needed to give you a new kind of performance, new smoothness. ' ...... Easier rocking! It's even easier to "rock” out of sand, snow, or mud with Fordo matic than with Conventional drive. All you do is flick the drive selector between Low (to) and Reverse (R). Fordomatic's \ safer, too, because like conventional drives,'.forward and reverse positions are separated by neutral AUTO SALES & SERVICE CO. j Your Friendly Ford & Mercury Dealer ] n.mn n r Phone 2111 J j Dunn, N. C» . THE HOMECOMING for Marine Sgt. Harvey Pomerantz, 22, is • joyous one as he hugs his Wife and three -1 month-old son, whom he’s meeting for the first time, following arrival i at La Guardia Field, N. Y, from California. Pomerantz, who was shipped to Korea shortly after his marriage, '.vas recently discharged from tlie service. (International) Phone Folks Jumping To Meet Demands ! j By LYNN NISBET 'I RALEIGH, Sept. I—Despite the ' great expansion of facilities at the ■ Raleigh central station of South ’: ern Bell Telephone & .Telegraph : Company since the war,' demands 1 for service have kept the telephone : | folks jumping to meet them. j Many subscribers have been for :! ced to accept new numbers because ,'mechanical devices at the exchange i could not handle the business ■ through old Channels. i The state government has mush - roomed during the past few years 1: so that entirely new pnd larger I equipment had to be installed In the capitol branch exchange a few I months ago. ■' Now another change is in the > i offing and before long the old fam : I iliar number 661 for the capitol of i j ficcs mult give place to another L ! number of perhaps five digits. No. 'body is very happy about the nec- You’re boa every second! Fordomatie obeys your every wish. Step down on the accelerator and you get an extra spurt of power for hill climbing and passing. Going downhill you can shift to low at any speed for extra engine braking. - V It's a gas-saving powerhouse! Fordo mafic’s lower rear axle ratio gives the fewest engine revolutions per mile of any car in its field with an automatic trans mission. Fordomatic’s autoriTotic inter mediate gear provides smooth, fast economical "getaway” without wasteful engine racing. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 p 4 i lo i IvloDP HSHiiri ii j Project How Underway STANFORD, Calif. (DP) A teaching doctor at Stanford Uni versity and, a research engineer from Portland. Ore., have complet ed the first phase of a project that may be important to medical education. The project Is a complete atlas of human anatomy in three-di mensional kodachrome transparen cies. each keyed to a matching dia gram drawn to scale. :The work is being carried out by Dr. David L. Bassett, associate professor of anatomy in the Stan ford medical school, and his col league William B. Gruber, Inven tor of a modem stereoscope known as the “View Master.” - They have finished the pains taking task of photographing 238 related dissections of the human central nervous system. Project Unfinished It has taken them two years to \ complete this section of the stero scopic atlas and it will be pub lished early In 1952. It will take them six to eight years and some -2.000 dissections and photographs before this project is finished. Although the views can be pro . jected on large scieens, the three dimensional quality being main tained by the use of special glasses for the spectators, the most com mon use of the kodachromes is expected to be with the compact and convenient hand viewer. Preparing the specimens is ex acting work. The tissues must appear as nearly identical to liv ing tissues as possible. To prevent the discoloration usually seen In anatomical ma terial. the blood vessels are flushed . . Yesterday’s Star By United Press Catcher Roy Campanella, Dodg ers—Hit two home runs while driving in five runs in the first game and wound up with six hits in seven times at bat as Brooklyn defeated the Braves 7 to 2 and 7 to 2 to boost its National League lead back to six games. essity for deserting an old friend of such faithfulness, but growth and . progress has a price that must be - paid. • * Cvv Come bi and ‘To*# Drive” the _ , FORDOMATfC l ’ : c/v .’xy.tiih r i- jT ;■ 1 with salt solution before embMiJ inf. Arteries are then filled with? red latex rubber, veins filled with! blue. Mart Work Quickly Once the specimens are set upj under the camera, the work muslj proceed quickly before they begin! to dry out under exposure to thsl warmth of the photo lights. Grubed has devised special equipmenfl which enables him to operate thd lights and camera by remote coni troL vj A stereoscopic atlas of humaa anatomy is not a brand new ideal Bassett points out that the Uni-j versity of Edinburgh published such an atlas before the turn on the century. There have also been other attempts to make use of stereoscopic views as a teaching method. It is the progress in photog j raphy,* exemplified by the develop ment of color film, and the photo graphic - i illumination met*>d graphic - illumination methods devised by Gruber that makes Bassett’s project a special con tribution to science. ■ ■ ii LEE'S Truck Terminal'- (0) 24 Hour Road And Wrecker Service PHONES 2727 - 2052 FAYETTEVILLE DUNN, N. C.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view