THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 18, IMI ERWIN SOCIETY Erwin HD Club Holds Meeting Monday Afternoon The Erwin Homo Demonstration Club held its first fan meeting Monday evening at 7:00 o'clock in the park center club building. The meeting opened with the group singing together “America”, this was followed by the collect of club women of America. Mrs. Frank Ralph, club president, presided over the business session during which time she appointed Mrs. Dan Ennis, Mrs. Lutie Fowler and Miss Ruby Sewell as a nom inating committee, to present a slate of officers for the coming year at the; November meeting. The meeting was then turned over to Miss Loraine Vail, home avent. Miss Vail announced that Achievement Day would be held in Angier this year on November the 9th. Following other announcements, Mtrs Vail gave a very interesting demonstration on “Eat To Con trol Your Weight." Following the demonstration the meting adjourned to meet the third Monday night in November. Present for the meeting were Mesdames: Novella Holland, Er win Brantly, Haywood Butler, Johnny Whitman, Lutie Fowler, D. C. Parrish, Ijyron Stevens, Helen Carr, Wilbert* Tyson, Frank Ralph, Coy Norris, J. J. Hudson, Pink Leonard, Dan Ennis, Lyman Shep pard, Leon Wade and Miss Ruby Sewell. ERWIN PERSONALS TO STATE FAIR Mr. and Mrs. Jim Fann and daughter, Sylvia attended the State Fair Tuesday. VISITS PARENTS Pfc. Bobby Ray Hall, who is at tending the State University in Belleville, 111., spent the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Hall Another son, Chester Hall, of Henderson, also spent the Thousands of satisfied users stand concrete proof that l one-coat paint! •ONE COAT COVERS! «NOT A RUBBER-WATER •READY* MIXED! MIXTURE BUT A PURE * M OIL PAINT! •ALL COLORS fACTORY* - __ M .. ne . A _,-„ MATCHED •SOFT, FLAT DECORATOR no blending!' 1,0 SHIM£ ’ •WASHABLE! NO OLA E! „ TIUT „ . •MATCHING SHADES FOR »rea L Jn,n«. * TRIM A WOODWORK IN DEEP COLORS! SEMI-GLOSS! •DRIES QUICKLY! •TROUBLE-FREE! . J2D •“*«■ m S» •SMOG-PROOF! ! , Pf g HM WA •SELF PRIMING! Cofl* eovlpt* \ wmp MEL am. JL .JMniinCTniiMwiiTHiliWHHllW % ' * WOTNM ; week end with his parents. IN FAYETTEVILLE Mrs. Erwin Brantly and daughter Patsy, and Mrs. Harvey Williams and children, Judy and Joe visited in Fayetteville Saturday. FROM DANVILLE <J. L. Honeycutt of Danville, Vir ginia, spent the weekend with his mother. HOME FOR WEEKEND Jackie Stewart, student at U.N.C. Chipel Hill spent the week end with his parents. ATTEND GAME Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thomas, Jr., and daughter, Sara and Martha Ann, attended the Duke-State game in Durham Saturday. IN ARIZONA Lalon Parnell is visiting rela tives in Tuscon, Arizona. FROM GREENSBORO Mrs. Julian Smith and son, Rich ard of Greensboro, are visiting Mm. Smith’s mother, Mrs. P. G. P» r *<V- v MRS. GRIFFIN HERE Mrs. Griffin of Woodland visited her son and daughter-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. L. W. Griffin last week. FROM RALEIGH Mrs. Wilma De Staccio of Ral eigh spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Thompson. ERWIN HOSPITAL PATIENTS Miss Vivian Hughes. Mrs. Verana McLean, Mr. George Bennett, Mrs. Pattie Honeycutt, Mrs. Ruby Stanley, Mrs. Joy Niehuke, Mr. Lessie Price, James A. Faircloth, Betty West. Mr. J. P. Davis, Mrs. Ada Collier, Mrs. Lula Stewart, Winnie Pearl McNeill, (Col.) Pauline GUI (Col.), Malzle Smith (Col.) LAS VEGAS PREPARES FOR 'A* TESTS I REMEMBERING WHAT HAPPENED during the last atomic blast, anxious citizens of Las Vegas, Nevada, are taking all precautions against the com ing tests. Here, Mrs. Margaret Rosemeir and I. Allison tape their win dows to prevent the glass from shattering when the blasts begin. At least 5,000 U. S. troops will undergo maneuvers for the first time in shadows east by actual atomic explosions. (International Soundphoto) LIGHT And BRIGHT ! CHICAGO —(m— A new policy was in force today for the alcholic derelicts of Chicago's Skid Row. From now on, habitual drunken ness offenders will be fined S2OO or 100 days on a work farm. Police Commissioner Timothy O’- Connor said “this not only will clean up Skid Row—it will benefit the drunks as well.” SEATTLE —HP)— Three-year-old Esther Sorenson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Sorenson, was help ing out with the household duties as usual yesterday. She emptied the ash trays Into the toilet bowl. Later In the day her mother not iced the young helper had mistak en some “green colored stuff on thC dresser tor KftMjj- " nii nillhad out a S7O roll or bins. BELLINGHAM, Wash. —(W— Po liceman Earl Dunkle got his man yesterday, but he won't recommend the method used. \ While cruising about the city, he received a radio report of a drunk en driver. He started to acknow ledge the call when—Whambo! A large truck, of the same des cription just reported to him, it smashed his car head-on. The driv er was charged with drunken driv ing. > DENVER —(IF)— Detective Wil bert Metzler testified that when he took his three-year-old son to the shop for a haircut, the barber, Vir gil Heeron, sold him a football par lay card and explained how to bet It * The barber was fined $25 yester day ahd given a 30-day sentence. For gambling. DENVER —(IB Donald H. Stone was caught speeding by police, who testified he was traveling 80 miles an hour and ran a red light. Stone was fined SB4 and sentenced to 60 days in jail by the municipal court Not satisfied with the verdict. Stone appealed to the county court. An all-woman Jury yesterday fin ed him S3OO and sent him to Jail for 90 days. SALES AND SERVICE :• WPm,' Let Us Repair J * Your Car For Summer Strickland ' j--. i THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN. N. CL Mrs. Green, 34, the former Baroness Egan von Mauchenheim of Munich, took the oath of alleg iance yesterday. She and her thep What did you do when these stories broke? Recon! Saow Bories CHy. You asked: How deep is it? Traffic stopped? How wiU I get to work? Other places snowed in 7 too? How bad are the phone* hit? Anybody get frozen? SB I leopard Escapes. You asked: Two Hurt In Benson Wreck ’ Two persons suffered minor in juries in an accident Saturday at 8 p. m. on the Morgan Road one 1 mile east of Benscn. ( Involved in the collision were a 1 1950 Ford pick-up operated by 1 Floyd Johnson. 44, of Route 2. ■ Benson, and a 1951 Ford driven ] by J. W. Parker, 17, of Route 2, Benson. , I Handy Mac Beasley, 19, of Route 1 9, Benson, a passenger in the car, and Mrs. Floyd Johnson, 40, of i Route 2. Benson, a passenger in : the pick-up, sustained minor bruts- 1 es and cuts. They were given first a*d treatment. . i State Highway Patrolman First i Clpss W. L. Morrow of Benson re ported that the car was passing o*-her vehicles on a curve when it met the pick-up. The car' went off the left side of the road in an ef fort to avoid a collision, but struck the right side of the pick-up, said the officer Th" car overturned, he added. > Parker was arrested on charges of careless and reckless driving. Damage was estimated at $1,700 to the 1951 Ford and S4OO to the pick-up. Assisting Morrow with the In vestigation was State Highway Patrolman S. K. Johnson of Dunn. VISIT MRS. AVERY Mrs. W. W. Evans and Children, Linda Leigh and Wanda Jean, and Mrs. Lee R. Powell and children. David Lee and June Gail, all of Norfolk, Va., have been spending a few days with Mrs. Evans mother. Mrs. Ethel Avery of Dunn, Rt. 3. husband fled Nazi Germany In • 1935, and this government ordered i them out of the country five times - between 1936 and 1940. Each time j they averted deportation. COATS SOCIETY BARBECUE SUPPER AND i ENTERTAINMENT , By CLYDE BRYAN On Thursday evening October , 18th the Junior O. U. A. M. Council ( 417 of Coats will sponsor a bar- < becue supper and entertainment for the benefit of the Junior Order Orphanage located at Lexington, N. C. , 1 The supper will be served from 6:00 to 8:00 P. M. in the Agricul ture Building. At 8:00 o’clock the children from the home will give an entertain ment in the High School Auditorium This is a very worthy cause and we think you would be highly pleas ed with the entertainment the children would give plus a delicious supper. Someone will hold a lucky ticket for which a twenty five dollar War Bond will be awarded. You will I not have to be present to be eligible for the bond. All you need to do is purchase a ticket for the supper, if your number is drawn you will be the winner of the bond. ATTENDED WEDDING IN RALEIGH Mrs. H. A. Turlington Sr.. Miss Bobbie Turlington and Mrs. T. J. Turlington attended the wedding of the niece of Mrs. T. J. Turling ton, Miss Doris Ogbum and Mr. John Ecklin Taylor. At the Church of the Good Shepherd in Raleigh Saturday afternoon. Mrs. J. R. Butler accompanied her son Dr. Clarence Roberts to Washington, D. C. ,where he will attend a dental meeting for several days. Lieutenant and Mrs. Pat Jones of Ft. Bragg visited the parents i of Mrs. Jones for a few days last l week. i • Messrs R. Hal Smith, James s Valsame, Joe Veasey, and Ray Coon attended the Edico. dinner V nHIv Hr HI : k •« players Admit Bribes. You asked: What players? What teams? What games did they throw? Who bribed them? For how much money? What action will the colleges take? you heard a flash report on | TV or radio. But the minute you got a chance, you grabbed for your newspaper. You knew it was the only place to get the whole story-/or*. There in the paper was everything... facta you couldn't get in a hurried broadcast. . . facts you couldn’t wait ft* till they appeared In magazines. It happens day after day. Each day there are many stories that are only half told foe you-or not told at tH-uatU you read your newspaper. You feel like a hermit if you miss a single issue. For H always turns out that something has happened that apparently everybody knows about bid you. Andeverybody else feels the|mne way. Everybody reads die newspaper every day... though tbe big news for one may be an interview with Tta>, and for aiiother The daily newspaper is always “first with the most" meeting at Benhaven School Mon day evening. Miss Doris Johnson a student at Womans College, Greensboro, and Miss Mary Jo Johnson a stu dent at East Carolina College, Greenville spent the weekend with their parents Mr. Joe Johnson. Miss Eva Bateman, a member of the Coats School faculty attended the District Meeting of the Delta Kappa Gamma, an Honorary So ciety for Teachers, at Sanford Sat urday. Harnett Soldier Gets Promotion M-Sgt. Curtis R. Reardon, Route 1, Lillington, has been promoted to the grade of warrant officer junior grade by his organization at. the artillery center here. WOJG Reardon has been in the service since 1936 and arrived at Fort Sill in July, 1947. He is a veteran of World War II having served in the European theatre and is the holder of the Bronze Star. BETA’S LADIES’ READY-TO-WEAR GIRLS’ & BOYS’ CHINA & CRYSTAL CLOTHES GIFTS IN BENSON rrs .. . BETA’S • ''*•-** to sell, the newspaper is die place to reach all the people all the time. *♦'“ , v *’-»£»> x‘‘2£hH >'★ ★ A Y In advertising, why deni in fraction*? Magazines reach only fractions of your . market Each one appeals to some people not to others. No magazine it read by everyone in town who can possibly buy. Radio and TV programs reach only frac tions, too. Each one appeals to a limited audience—sport fans, homemakers, kids, etc. And how many of these cm listen at the time you broadcast? ■?*' Dtp mmfmm t&t* i» w-jU-Jy up" SECOND SECTION PAGE ONE Judy Gatfahd Returns Vdtrily To Broadway NEW YORK UPC.--" Holly wood's hard luck girl Swif Gar land brought back big-tfina two-a day vaudeville to Broattway today with a bang the old street hasn't heard In 20 years. Slimmed down for her first big stage debut here, vibrajjt throated Judy was barraged with, applause during her 50-minute performance last night by a capacity audience that included virtually -every show business celebrity In the books. TRAFFIC BLOCKED Outside the historic Palace Thea tre police had to block off Broad way with sawhorses and cordonn to control enthusiastic crowds. Also on the bill are the Langs, acrobats; Doodles and Spider, pan tomime satirists to records; Joe Smith and Charlie Dale in one of the comedy sketches that mad* them vaudeville stars years ago; the dancing Szonys. Max Bygraves, a new British comedian; and eight young male dancers.

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