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YK TAW 71 WEEKS TO PAYI ~ I W' ELECTRIC RANGE
j | 1 Here’* your chance to buy a full-size, fully
automatic Q-E Range at a really low price!
.Sm*b NC M Iwiefti ftw* Mqr t But hurry—we have only a
Purdie Equipment Company
••EQUIPPED—TO EQUIP— YOUR FARM AND HOME”
So. Clinton Avo. Dunn, N. C.
Autfcodtiltf
/GENERAL# —
p,i"i iwwiwiwwwee -earn. RANGCS ■■■ ■ ■■■ ; ■- ■ ■■ ."» |
_.. TURKEYS
Chickens Ducks
m FOR
The
HOLIDAYS
ASK FOR
WIMBERLY'S
DRESSED POULTRY
r - * "TJ-"
We have contracted to handle the ' W« hay# >o* and maintained the
Roost grade of turkeys available for highest standard of milk feeding our
tho coming holiday season. Cars and chickens. This method has paid off
selection has been combined to , for as in being able to supply your
servo the choicest of birds for your local meat market with tho most fe
loml food stores. lect fryers, broilers and roasting
a«it bar • ■ chickens In your area.
- AIK FOR
;tk : i r ‘ WIMBERLY'S WIMBERLY'S
l Dressed Poultry Dressed Poultry
|P|| E BLY sSt
AS ARCTIC DEFENSE AID
CANADA HIGHWAY SEIN :
United fr*a* Stott Correspondent
EDMONTON, Alta. HP —Federal
and Alberta government officials
look to * new highway to * n*w
highway to help build up Canada's
vastly rich but comparatively un
scratched northland.
The all-weather Mackenzie High
way also is being heralded as an
important road Unit in the event
of an enemy attack over the polar
region.
The highway creese* 384 mile* of
muskeg, forest and farmland on
a course due north from the north
ern AJberta oenter of Grimsbgw to
Hay River, on Oreat Slave Lake,
northwest territory.
A graver rqgd built three years
ago at a ee*t of *4,300,000 to both
governments, the Mackenzie High
way is making its importance felt
in the northland.
TRADE GROWS
The highway id connected with
the main road system in northern
Alberta which, traveling south, ties
in with Edmonton, and, northwest',
reaches Dawson Creek, B. C., the
jouthsrn terminus of the Alaska
Highway.
Alberta officials surveyed the
results of the Mackenzie Highway
and got these results:
Traders who once had to wait
weeks for a shipment of supplies
freighted along the Peace River, or
THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C.
One Accident
Is Reported
A minor accident Sunday after
noon was reported by the Dunn
, Police Department. The crash og
i purred at the Intersection of South
i Clinton and East Cumberland
, when a 1851 Ford two door was
: hit by a 1951 Chevrolet trunk.
The Ford, driven by. Estelle Mar
ler Oainey, a teacher of Dunn
i Route 1. had stopped for a light
■ and the truck, driven by Harold
Hartwell Oainey o* Dunn Route
. 1 struck it in the rear, damaging
; It about SSO.
The car was owned by O. K.
Oainey and the truck by C. A.
Gainey, both of Dunn Route 1. No
one was injured and no charges
were filed. i
by winter tractor-train, now have
goods delivered to their doorstep
wnthin hours after large trucks have
left Grimshaw.
Miners no longer have to fly or
freight their heavy machiney into
the north at exorbitant costs. Heavy
trucks carry supplies to Hay River,
where boats regularly serve Yellow
knife and points along the Mac
kenzie River system, which reach
es north to the Arctic coast
North of Grimshaw, homestead
ers use the highway to carry rich
harvests to elevators on the rail
way. Last year more than 600,000
bushels of wheat and 200,000 bush
els of cdkrse grain were taken to
market over the road.
PLENTY OF FISH
Great Slave Lake provides Can
ada with the greatest source gs
fresh water fish of any lake ip
the country. Last year, about
8,000,000 pounds of whiteflsh and
trout, valued at *612,000, were haul
ed from Hay River south along the
highway to market outlets.
Formerly, limited supplies o f
fish were taken only in the sum
mer from the northern lake and
transported by water down the
Slave and Athabasca Rivers. Wintef
fishing now accounts 'for almost
half the total annual catch.
Fur traders now market their
pelts over the highway, whereas
they formerly used the waterways
or airplanes by necessity. Trappers
and traders are within easy reach
of hospitals and medical services.
Tourists are able to get their
first look at the 46-foot Louise
Falls and the 106-foot Alexandra
Falls along the Hay River parallel
ing the highway at various points.
Also moving out over the high
way are gold from Yellowknife,
unanium from Port Radium and
other metals urgently needed in
Canada's defense build-up. Moving
into the northland over the high
way are defense construction ma
terials Tor the air force and army
establishments in the north.
MICKEY MOUSE
SNUFFY SMITH ~~ ’ _
MM— ' " __ _
JOHN MUST'have" H, /^GUNe^CAN
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PAGE THREE