PAGE FOUR ‘ ftflL j£A.‘Jtf l3finflKjUm». /fc’Vft *¥t2* ■wKii ~ rusK" ;w£ 5> J „-, .v& - fHh— i » * - *,. ,• '• t * * >., ,- •'” v .;--'*>* •,*•,. •' ‘ -. * , J-';.* i I SMth afl - wW'sKT-s nJW^M^yViywß Hf S-rs I ''?% k ' ;; ?ijj|ifc. l tjiji S:W I Jfi... JMML wv , PPaEW V Lgj. IlsP*' ** .„ - %, ’j I < ! i ■ 1 ■ 1 FOURTH GRADE VISITORS The Beys and girls of Mrs. Catlett’s fourth grade visited The ’ Daily Record last week. They had' read in their “Young America Readers” about how news reaches the printing office. They saw the teletype on which the news comes to The Dally Record. The following boys and girls visited the local newspaper: Odell Wade, Susan Purdie, Larry Warren, «illy Hair, Betsy Johnson, Eloise Coats, George Neighbors, Marie Warren, Fat Walker, Hugh Harrelson, ' Hannah White, Melvin Barbour, Donald Barefoot, Shirley Moore, Bud Hudson, Rayma Lee, Annette Clontz, Nylah Poteat, Donny Whittenton, Sandra Godwin, Bubba Peay, Ann Jackson, Jimmy Cook, Louis Tew Barbara Martin, R. C. Hamilton, Alma Westbrook, Richard Manning, Carolyn Hawley, Jimmy Jackson, Dorothy Strickland, Becky Aycock, Becky Earp, Charlotte Glover, Sonny Livingston ] and Bobby Hodge. TV WARNING SAVES BABY FROM WRONG MEDICINE BUFFALO, N. Y. (IP)—Local tele vision viewers witnessed a real-life drama when a station interrupted its program with an emergency announcement: “Here is a special bulletin from Buffalo police headquarters. The your dttcbareinthMrcritkj 'cot growing stag*. Amro tttotr strong, holtfay growtt by feeding diem 3TAF-0- LIFE Growing Medi—tiie p "m* — balanced feed es top-j qualify ingrecKenfs, rich in (nutritional value* If help* vigerou* pxfok ■ n for maximum efg yield. m ’ Dunn Hatchery j. LEON GODWIN, Prop. * - Phene 2740 Dunn. N. C ...These Advantages are yours in a JOHN MERE PICKUP HARROW KHnk of SI In less S)an two minutes you any deefated working depth *.. on the go. a John Deere Pickup Harrow to Excellent disking is yours on every job, i&wV or 'Y' Tractor and ■st motion... no delay of tbeworking depth of the harrow. ■t quick attaching and detaching . Close-coupled, this sturdy pickup harrow ■ convenient transporting aren t all this |g mighty easy to maneuver ... practically as Htw offers. Smooth, positive Touclwo- easy handhng as the tractor alone. K will H: hydraulic control makes operation pay to investigate the advantages this has* It raise*, lowers, or sets disk gangs at row offers you. See us foe further details.. / j man who picked up a prescription from Harry’s Pharmacy tonight Is warned not to use the medicine. Police say the wrong prescription was handed out.” Sitting at home watching tele vision, Elmer F. Claire, 32, said to his wife, “They must mean us.” Mrs. Claire opened a package her husband h»d Just brought from r the drugtsore He thought it con- t tained nose drops for their 10* month-old son but found it was t the wrong medicine. The baby was asleep when Claire ] brought the package heme, so luckily he laid it aside. OH Expert Arrive* 4 31 l %! yrt • pP ■ Karen Hassibi IRAN'S leading oil expert, Karen Hassibi waves a greeting an his arrival at Idlewild Airport, New York. Called to Washington bp \ Iranian Premier Mossadegh, the Special Undersecretary of Finance for Oil in Iran’s Cabinet told news men his summons might be taken as an indication of a p** as** tlement in dispute. (International) Tfl* DAILY RECORD. DUNN. N. C Todays Sportrait By OSCAR FRALEY (United Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK (IB Fay Taylour, a pert, red-haired colleen from Dublin, laid claim today to being the world’s fastest woman driver and challenged American racing men to let her prove that statement. As for the first part, there can be small doubt. The petite lady from the Emerald Isle broke Sir Malcolm Campbell’s lap record at Brooklands, England’* T>ws*t > -*v» u.<. a top speed of 150 miles an hour In the South African Grand Prir. "I heard this' was the land of freedom and opportunity,” she ex plained after a cross-country trip planned just to see New York’s skyscrappers. “But everywhere there is prejudice "against permit ting women to compete on an equal basis with men." Miss Taylour admitted that It has been a tough struggle “trying to earn my bread and butter In the most enjoyable way I — driving a racing car.” But she" finally cracked the ice in midget cars and stock car events by driving qualifying heats and match races in Seattle, Portland, Oakland,' San Diego. Los .Angeles, Kansas City, St. Louis. Chicago, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh. It’s a career which started for her when she won a S3OO home economic prize while attending school in Dublin and had a boy friend who lived 13 miles away. Pedaling a bicycle that far was too ardurous. She invested her winnings In a motorcycle, and "just drifted” into motorcycle racing. In a short while she made two trips to Austra’la and New Zealand to compete in races and then, while visiting family friends in India, broke the Calcutta to Ranshl record, a 350-mile ride, by 40 minutes. At Brooklands in 1936, Miss Taylour was loaned an Alfa-Romeo to compete in a woman’s race. She not only won but broke the one-lap record held by Campbell with-an 80-mile-an-hour average over the torturous course. The war interrupted her racing career and she was selling farm equipment in Dublin when the urge came to visit the United States. She obtained a contract to sell, foreign cars in California and came to the United States —by freighter in 1949. “I’m perfectly safe on the track,” she confessed in perfect women’s reasoning, "because a fortune teller once told me I’d live to be 67.” But she still takes a talisman to the track with her whenever she races. It’s a smooth silk nightgown. “That’s because I cracked up one,” she smiled, “and when I regained consciousness in the hospital I had on a starched night gown. It was terribly uncomfortable.” Yet this is the same little lady who skids a midget into a dirt track turn at 80 miles an hour and thinks it’s “great fun.” Off her record, it’s easy to see why the men are dodging her. Imagine following a lady driver all day! The biggest ALARM of a11...' \vv then sue strikes, you may hear one that matters to you. Plus a hundred things Magazines reach qnly fractions of your mar- W alarm...maybe a second alarm...per- you don’t find anywhere else. ket. For each one appeals to some people—not haps even a third. But the biggest alarm of ‘ to others. No magazine is read by everyone in , all is the alarm in your heart. > It doesn t take a fire. You can he just as town who can possibly buy. wrought up tomorrow about a plan in the ' % ! "Was anybody caught inside... anybody I town council to widen your street. You never ‘ R*!* o ant * TV programs reach only fractions know...hurt?...burned?...overcome? How’d know what’s coming... so you read your news- y° u * market. Each one appeals to only a it start? How much loss? What’s the whole paper eveiy day. , s ? eciai audience “ SP 01 * fans ’ homemakers, itory?” kids, etc. And how many of these can listen 1 | _ .. , k.. Everybody ebe is just like yoa. Everybody a t die time you bfifedcast? . m j- Until you see pm newspaper. asthefire. customers and prospects read the paper too- You grab your paper and all the answers are * That’s, why when pu have something to at the times they choose, for as long as they there. First, in complete detail, full of local seil ( the newspaper is the one place to reach choose! color-as it never could be anywhere else. all the people aD the time. Only the newspaper is first with the most You knew it would all be there. Together * '* * . news... firstwith the most people... first with #> . with all the other news to be found anywhere la advertising, why deal in fractions?..* the most advertisers! . .*'''” - ■ . ' <1 , ■ »■ « Mr > MmhMwBMBMH * '• •,■ •:•••. 'I « ■ mSSm I I ■ The newspaper is always "first with the most" '' . ' R* BKMItAC Nenetofaa py rMAM* UM WXW^APR^y' B 1 §m W W ‘w > ' \ " ' ‘. - A ■ • f i inn CAST IN OPERA PERFORMANCE Pictured are the members of the east of the Opera, Traviata which played at the B. Rich Memorial auditorium si Campbell College Tuesday. SeatD on the divan Is Miss Deborah Alden who sang the part of the illfated heroine, Violetta Valery. At her left is David Witherspoon who sapg the lead tenor role of Alfredo GermonL Others in the cast and the parts they portrayed are; Nora Sands as Flora Bevroix; Ann LaFretta as Annina; Rlghard Owens as Alfredo’s father; William Allen as Gaston, Viscount de Letorieres; Alec Dante v as Baron Duphol; Harry Garland as Marquis D’Oblgny; Elfego Esparza,as Doctor Grenvil; Virginia Hudmall as Girometta; Ann Pierce as Lisetta; and Joanne Shedy as Alicia. (Daily Record photo by Louis Dearborn). ’ - ' » MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 5, 1151

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