••• - ■ . . • •• •• v . - THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 31, 1952 March Os Dimes Programs • Set In Banner Township # R. A. CHESTNUTT CO. Fayetteville Highway PHONE 3591 DUNN, N. C. .— L —t LISTEN ‘iAILY TO “Your v-ylu Country Preached’ With Favorite HiH’/llj Hymns m AT 10 A. M. , * Erwin: N. C. V p AU —I-»M> -J+. «—|WWfP— > NOW shoWING 1952 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 180 Horsepower Firepower Engine Ask For A Demonstration And Get The Thrill Os A Lifetime. See The 1952 Chrysler Today COATS MOTOR company;' Coats, N. C. +Stewart+ Today & Friday Also News Comedy NewS Pacemaker +Harnett+ Last Time Today • | AJiiuß fvsJuu (Dew QT a HtftXHIaHV Hlill n * WILL -- He. A*% ■ i •.»■ H < '/)# H ii?, Ci TAitS 1 II * || II CALL 2187 -IT MAY Bp YOUI | . Johnston County made a late start in its March of Dimes Drive and Mrs. Margaret B. Smith and Mrs. Joe Abdalia, Banner township chairmen, announced today that the drive for the $2,000 Banner . Township quota will be continued beyond the end of this month. I Tuesday night a Mothers March on Polio, similar to the one con ducted In Dunn was held. The fire alarm sounded at 7:90 signalling the start of the drive. Captains were' Mrs. P. B. Wood, Mrs. Ed Rill, Mrs. R. O. Vann and Mrs. Marshall Woodall. Thursday night,, January 31, a benefit basketball game will be played at the Benson American Le- > gion Building between Buie's dreek 'and Benson, with boys and girls teams competing. This program, beginning at 7:30, will also include cake walks and cash prizes. Thursday, Friday and Saturday ' Os this week, from 10:15 until 11:00 each morning, the program on radio station WCKB, originating in Ben son, will be Interrupted for tunes telephoned in with March of Dimes pledges^ SPECIAL PROGRAM Qn Saturday afternoon, Feb. 2, from’ 4:00 until 5:00 WCKB wUI broadcast direct from the Rose and Co., Furniture Store for the March of Dimes. The program will feature the Green Valley Boya, SmUe-A-Whlle /Boys, Price Sisters and Southern Farm Boys. During the program -**•*-*» ■" ■ '-ii ■ ■ m LEE'S l 4 H»ur Road Truck Terminal (Esso) And Wrecker V Service PHONES 1727 - H>s2 nrAYETTETOJJEHWY. DUNN. N. C. Friday v Cartoon 2^Shows Nightly BOIL OFFICE OPfln&SO Shows Start At * And 9 tmdorl2 In cars f SEE s requests for selections can be phon » ed to the store. 1 Thursday evening- Feb. 7, there ; > will be a square dance and round t dance at the Legion Building with r a ’ popular Goldsboro orchestra. 1 There will be cash prizes, a cake walk and other events. Mrs. Will Woodall Is ticket chairman for this 1 event. Mrs. Joe Abdalia is co-chairman ■ for the township, and the tele ! phone committee for the entire 5 drive consists of Mrs. Ed Johnson, 1 Mrs. Joe Levinson, Mrs. C. C. Can ■ aday, Jr., and Mrs. David Henry Parker. So that the citizens of Banner ; township may know how the drive ' is progressing, a thermometer has ’ been erected in the depot square, j showing the amount raised and the * amount still to be raised. > United Forces : Plan A Program With Primary time drawing near and candidates announcing, the ■ United Forces for Education has set up a five-point legislative program 1 for the next two years, which they 1 will champion. , It is the hope of the group, ; through gaining public support for [ the measures, to encourage favorable 1 action on some or all phases of the program. A series of meetings, to all of which the public will be ( invited has been scheduled. The first meeting of the Har nett County United Forces for Edu cation has been set for February 7, at 8:00 p.m, in the Campbell College Auditorium. The public Is cordially invited to attend. FIVE POINT PROGRAM The five point program, which the United Forces for Education will work toward during the next two years includes: 1. The Immediate reduction of class size from 32 pupils per teach er to 30. pupils per teacher, based on average daily attendance, and the reduction to 25* pupils per teach er as soon as possible. 2. A salary schedule of S2BOO to S4IOO for A certificated teachers, as a minimum, based'on present con ditions with commensurate increas. es in salaries or other school per sonnel. The salary schedule for A certificated teachers shall be based on not more than 12 Increments. 3. Sufficient funds to employ an adequate number of properly quali fied attendance enforcement per ympfl * 4. Appropriations not only to meet Increased costs of current expense items but also to provide additional required services and supplies (such as improved Janitor and maid ser , vices, clerical aid for schools and more Instructional materials.) 5. Capital outlay funds by bond Issue to complete the present school building program, these funds to be distributed on the basis of need and ability to provide. College Gets A New Tractor Teamwork on the part of sev eral outstanding Campbell College Alumni made it possible foa the I college to secure a new Super A tractor and four new tractor at tachments in order that the col lege might secure and develop ad ditional farm land, it was revealed by President L. H. Campbell. ' Floyd P. Price, Jr, Sehna. clast of 1931 and Joseph St. Overby, Smlthfield, class of 1931, accepted the challenge and the result was that the tractor has already been delivered to the farm with plow attachment, cultivator, distributor and rubber wheeled hay rake to be delivered in March. Overby recently stated, "I be lieve that any rsal need of the college can be met by Its alumni and friends. This eollegfe, which has] done so such for others, should I want for nothing.” HE WAS ROBBED 1 LEWISTON, Ids, an - Sheriff! Clare*** Kyle found hlo blackjack when he sorted through a pile of stolen articles cached under a hay stack. TEETH NOT NEEDED i SPOKANE, Wash. dh-A pawn shop repeated a man hocked hie teeth fen the duration of a meat strike- ih Spehamt >imw ■ wsmoNwumi) in i $ / Play makers . . _ >’■ ' W ' i: ; » In 'SPRINft FOR H®E" AT THE D. RICH MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM ON THE CAMPUS OF CAMPBELL COIXeGE. Tuesday Nile, Feb. sth - 8 p.m. #~BftJfei£TS NOW ON SALE AT CAMPBELL COLLEGE THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. O. ~ STATE FARM BRIEFS YADKINVILLE —When Ed Hol combe of YadklnvUle completed his commercial fence poet treating plant last month, his Idea was to provide a needed senrioe to nearby farmers. Imagine his surprise when his first customer turned out to be a man from Canada. R. D. Smith, Yadkin county farm agent for the State College Extension Service, explains that Mr. Hcricomb’se plant is located on Highway 801. The Canadian came by, saw the plant and bought 50 treated poets to fence his back yard. He sold posts like those couldn’t be bought In Canada. GOLDSBORO.—The mechanical tree planter made available to Wayne county farmers this winter has given even -better results than anticipated, reports G. Mark Go l forth, Jr., county agent tor the State College Extension Service. Anyone who has operated a to bacco transplanter can use the tree planter, Goforth explains. One man on the planter and another oper ating the tractor can sqt a large area in one day. Paul Uzsell of the Elroy community set a large tract that had a few pines already standing. He simply ran the plant er close to the standing trees and kept on planting. His only diffi culty was with a- few black jack oaks whose roots are so near the surface that they interfere With the planter. Goforth says the standard rec ommendation of 1,000 seedlings pet acre does not always hold for the mechanical planter. Most fanners using the machine have used from 1,200 to 1,400 seedlings per acre. WAYNESVILLK -The West Pig eon Community Development Club chose an appropriate theme' for their Pigeon Valley Fair Exhibit last fall, says W. L. Franklin, as sistant Haywood county agent for the State College Extension Serv ice. Title of the exhibit Was “Wheel of Progress”. Signs of progress may be seen at every hand In the community. Eighteen new homes have been, built during the past year and 50 more were either remodeled or re paired- ~pt -the throe clitrrJfuSe In the community, one Is how com pleting a new building. Three thou sand dollars were raised for Im provement and upkeeps of ceme teries. SANFORD.—The use of a soil fumigant last spring to control root knot Increased the yield and value of tobacco by over one-third on the farm of John T. Hancock. Route R Sanford. According to K. 8. Hannon, Lee county agent for th* &»ta College Kxtenslcm service, Mr. Hancock treated his sol! early in April, using DD soli fumigant. The yjeld per acre from the treated plot waa 1437 pounds as compared to only 1,210 pounds per acre from the untreated plot. Tobacco from the treated field averaged 62.5 cents and sold for $1,004 per acre. To bacco from the untreated field av eraged *1.4 cents and sold for $742 per acre. NEWTON.—A (Miry fanner who ml«rated from New York state to North Carolina Just a year ago has made good progress at breath ing new life into a run-down farm says J. Kay Allen, Cabarrus county apart for the State College Exten sion: Service. L. N. Roy kept only one young purebred Jersey bull when he sold out In New York and moved to a »rm on Route 4, Concord. His first purchase upon arrival was ten Jersays from Morrowcroft Farm new Charlotte. Since then he has added five mors. He seeded several acres of per manent pasture last fall and got food stands. He and his family have built a beautiful new mod ern brick veneer home and remod eled one of the old bams. MARSHALL.—BurIey One vari ety of tobacco has made a solid hit with Madison county farmers, ro- P°rts Y, L. Holloway, county agent for the State College Extension Service. Two farmers of the California I and Walter 1 Hawkta»-grew an acre of the | Burley One variety last season, liroen though dry weather cut their [yield, they stiß harvested E?!*?.. Mtwght a total of ZrTrrS. ■ or *”*• They believe that Btuley One can be epgcad somewhat (doeer than some of the * re * * helr 1961 crop la fohr-fdot rows, spaced 16 inches apart in the drill. North Carolina was one.of the toPfwrtAt** * In last BRINGING UP FATHER ..ppr 'iß'sunr 1 ii- • I^. 1 flSifel tassril saisrf" ),®l P4MNV.|g»?rTMWr ” '•tlllt'hl 1 HAspDOMBTiSfT 1 WEWAS DCTJKOPWVTEe- a . . , WOWHSLLW l .. , DONBTVtaertf WOSk-MXC SOOTWee » SWPLY AN'HEFAIkITED I• - ' 'j^ 1 S, *~’ '' ' j AGAIN !'! I Ur UNH-lv *1 Cow • ' K| m THAT WSWtNTfr-IN the EERIE abode o the com jure. BOTHER I*X)R 1 *X)R {’wav... rFa gggAT- SgANITrATHgg 1 r3sSr ; k t: „ 1 1 PjPN I I ffif v 'A ff m MTOW* cr-M & ■fMflllYJrA Avi IH ■ jipm rl M lAj PAGE THREE