.OSjiSBSBBm3SSSBm^*^aS^^Br
SALES 4|fep
SERVICE ■
A Big Complete Shop
124 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
SEE OUR GOOD USED CARS
! W. &S. MOTOR CO.
N. WILSON AVE. DUNN, N. C.
t—t— ——TT i . IT tt—
Dunn l(\
IS BUYING
CORN - SOY BEANS
OATS
AND
PECANS
AT THE
Farmers Warehouse
HOURS
7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Weekdays
CLOSE 12 NOON SATURDAYS
Fayetteville Hwy. Dunn, N. C.
J' 1 f * N 1 I I I I II I
Johnson’sPre-XMAS Fisk Tire/Battery Sale
S AUTOMOBILE TIRES AND; FISK transportation truck tires a tubes tractor and implement TIRES & TUBES
Airflight Deluxe T4res »
*' 2or 900 15 it PI„ *• * -• --' ■■- 11-24 4 Ply Clbsed Center
Blackwalls ' Price, Afore 700 15 ' 6 Plv ’ * ■* Special Pnce $ 45.00 each
600-16 4 Ply $17.25 $16.75 fiSS' fi fi l\l 805 ££ Sal- 2or ■
650-15 4 Ply 20.75 20.00 j? Kf* 22.00 Price More ||iF SiS.
650 16 4 P, y 21.25 20.50 snolfi ISJ 27.25 524 4 Pl> $42 50 $ 40.25 |r JBfik MMSHMSI
~V , .V 23.65 23.50 ZJJ'JS £ JJ y 50 31.00 10-24 4 Ply 50.75 48.25
750 16 4 Pi y 24.25 23-50 750-16 8 Ply 43 25 412$ J 1^ 4 4 Ply 61.00 58.00
fflsnngm 750-17 6 Pl > 52 - 75 50 - 25 13-28 4 pi y 8.5.00 so 75 tMMmmk \
l 2°°l° 8 Ply 46 25 44.00 10-34 4 Ply G 8.50 65.00 : ,—MBBBi.
8188 ‘BBKjy 700 -2® 10 £ y 59.75 56-75 10-36 4 Ply 70.50 67.00
Airborne Super Balloon Tires looJo lo moo S 3 B ul! JSj sS Js:?f »
640-15 4 P, y sl ®- 75 518.25 f> 12-38 6 Ply 104 75 ■
710-15 4 j»jy 2L75 t 13-38 6 Ply 118.75 112.75 »
tLs TRUCK TUBES PURCHASED WITH TIRES
* ,S lres sale 2« 30 PER CENT DISCOUNT -
450-21 4 Ely , 1C75 <n% Men ewa.* •
. REDUCED 20 PER CENT UPgiMff
AUTOMOBILE TUBES PURCHASED WITH TIRES tdaptad add .ud.cuckit mote 1
u ' TRACTOR AND IMPLEMENT TUBES -TThM I
■ RICE. -S’" Sale tor
ALL AUTOMOBILE TUBES REDUCED 30 PER CENT PURCHASED WITH TIRES REDUCED 30 PER CENT "k™ «2§ «!3j:
All Taxes Except N. C. Sales Tax Unladed S | Group IF 120R2HF 30 80.75 21.53 17.85 I j| 500-15 4 Ply - 14.75 jcC i
' Mas Reg Sale Each 100W8F 18 22.55 16.91 13.75 B 559-16 4 Ply 16-25 15.25 1
laalan«.aan TYPE <*s32 ?5L Price Group 2L 11DRGJL 86 33.10 21 52 17.25 B Bl 600-16 4 P, y 16 00 I*S J
jonnkon jjwi g|| |•”
H- < ; : f - > vk. ' , -ts- ’ /
' -> ' I> ' I MIN IIE
POPULAR BEKSOfc MUSICIANS ■— Shown are Mr*. C. N.
Bostic and her kocompanlst, Miss WHhemina Utley, of Denson, who
often find their services in deihand to. supply the-musical Interludes
for (roup fathering* in Benson. Mrs. Bostic has an excellent rep
ertoire of popular'and classical numbers, and ■ Miss Uttey is an .
accomplished pianist.' DaHy Record photo by Louis Dearborn).
;I" '' "'I '■ -T%
For Sole
SEVERAL GOOD
MULES
See BUD NORRIS
ONE MILE FROM DUNN ON
NEWTON GROVE HIGHWAY
lm 1 ........ ■ ■ M g.'-
•• T-j a>,-. ->*■*.*' ’■ » i ‘ V • ..
~~ TTODAILT BaOtMED, PPWf, IT. Cl '
—INSIDE STORY 1
Expression Os Confidence Paid
Dividonds In Notre Dame Game
BT LYNN NISBET
RALEIGH, November 20 —No
body has been found who was sur
prised that Notre Dame won the
football game from Carolina last
Saturday. A lot of people have
voiced surprise that the score was
sd close—and a good many folks
actually expected a tighter game.
They were the folks who knew
about an unpubliciaed bull session
in the Carolina field house after
practice last Wednesday.
That Incident proved that Carl
Snavely is not called the “Old Fox"
without good reason. The story isn't
supposed to be told, but It ought
to be widely published, it
tells the kind of stuff the coaches
and players at the university are
.made of. «w
The trays had been put through
a grueling practice on the field,
which was no easy job for Snavely
and his associates. Everybody was
tired, some of the fellows were half
mad and all of them were sort of
down, because they had lost a lot
1 of games to teams less powerful
than that Notre Dame bunch they
were going up against Saturday.
The “Old Fox” let them get pret-
Vty well cleaned up, and then he
called them to attention and made
a short speech. Unfortunately, his
words cannot be quoted exactly. In
general effect he said and did this:
“I wanta talk to you fellows.
First of all, I want to tell you I'm
proud of you and have complete
confidence in you. Before any of
ypu came to Chapel Hill, I knew
a lot about you. Your high school
records were carefully checked, not
only as to possibilities on the foot
ball field but as to your scholastic
work, your personal habits and soc
ial demeanor. If we hadn’t had
confidence in you then, you wouldn't
be here now. Nothing has hap
pened since you came here to
change my opinion of your honor,
Integrity and willingness to put
forth the best effort possible. I am
sure you have dime the best you
could, and t want you to know I
Have done the best I could under
the circumstances.
“We have had a bard schedule
and'.the scoreboard record doesn’t
look too good. We’ve ail made mis
takes..! have made .them, and you
have made them. We have two
more big games cooing up. I hope
we won’t make too many serious
mistakes in them. I want you to
know that I was proud of you when
you first put on your uniforms for
pre-season practice, I am proud of
you now, and I expect to be just
as prdud of .you when you take off
your uniform* after the last game
01. the year: and. the scoreboard
figures On these last two games
woh’t change'that feeling.”
There might have been some
more of the same kind, but that Is
enough. As the coach was\talklng
some of the fellows had a little
nose and eye trouble and had to
reach for towels. When he was
through, the coach himself uri
ashamedly reached into the barrel
for a mop cloth to use on his own
face. And the field house rocked
with the cheer the squad gave him.
Then the Carolina team went on
the field Saturday and lost another
game, but put up one of the best
exhibitions of clean sportsmanship
seen in a long time at Kenan stad
ium, where high class sportsmanship
is the usual order.
P^r- —t
j|^*2o9 9s I COOKIN6* |
1 1, «»«»». ELECTRIC RANG!
J Here's your chance to buy a full-sire, fully»
automatic G-E Range at a really low price!
Set this BIG G-f Bargain Range today! humr-v* have omy a fowl
Purdie Equipment Company j
“EQUIPPED—TO EQUIP—YOUR FARM AND HOME’’
So. Clinton Ave. Dunn, N. C. %
Authorial dealer
f GENERAL tiH ELECTRICW I
■ ""T i , RANGES ' ■'■■■■■!
■ 111 I » «»m ||) I—.1—. < ' „■ -cT-i
PAGE ONE
Metals Rain On
Earth From
Stratosphere
CHICAGO. IW Photographic
emulsions sent into the stratos
phere in giant plastic balloons
show that some nuclear particles
which make _up the cosmic ray
have masses greater than that of
iron.
Dr. Herman Yagoda of the -Na
tional Institute of Health made
the disclosure in a paper read to
the American Institute of. Physics.
Yagoda said heavy tracks were
found in the emulsions and that
they were made by ‘‘heavy”
nuclear particles. These rare visi
tors from outer space had not been
observed previously because of
. SECOM> StCTlCjb
their absorption or destructions
the stratosphere. £
Yagoda said such studies idg
cate that the earth is constant
receiving rain of hydrogen nu*2
of tremendous energy and *
Sparse dusting with -jaost of J
members of the periodic systenO
element*, including copper, bronS)
and even tin. T* *!
FIFTH OVER VtO T
WAKE FOREBT—Wake Fore#
1951 football team hos-Abe oppet
tunity of becoming the f««: Deaaj
eleven in 50 seasons IS~SCore mg
than 200 points in a single seagßl
Wake Forest has scored 184 pcojl
and needs only seven more tos
over the 200-point standard, if
Deacs wind up their season agaSS
South Carolina at Columbia, S.-'g
Saturday aftei-noon. rS