Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / April 15, 1953, edition 1 / Page 7
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WfebNESDA* AFTERNOON, APRIL IS, 1953 'ii ■ .1. II A1 » Gives Concert #he Campbell College Choir un de? the direction of S. David Smith, music director .of the institution, ..gave a concert dt Hayes Barton Baptist Church in Raleigh Sunday night of this past week. Lonnie Small, business manager' of the college, spoke at the same ■ time on the activities and life of the college. , In the morning the Choir sang at Ephesus Church, near Cary, of Which the Rev. Lonnie Woolweaver) mpastor. A bountiful picnic lunch was served by the church. OPEN HOUSE ~ High School students from all over Eastern North Carolina will converge on Campbell College on May 2 as the college,‘lts students . trustees and faculty, will play host to them at May Day festivities. Open House will be held at the Milage between 1J:00 in the mom jWTand 10 at night. Automotive I Shop And (f Machine Service Crankshaft U : J GRINDING SHAFT GRINDING IN fHE BLOCK HEADS RESURFACED PISTONS REGROUND WE HAVE THE MOST* ' COMPLETE SHOP IN DUNN W # ALL WORK GUARANTEED # | autom oti ve I SUPPLY CO. i # DIAL 3178 ' N. Railroad St. ‘ Dunn \kjf " '' ~ "" | HOW CHEAP IS LIFE? f Americans don’t think it’s so cheap. They 1 ■ ere new insuring their lives for mare than liSlr* ’ ililH $150,000,000,000. This insurance not only b flHj means that millions of American families ‘l are protected but aiso that many, many I ' jJ individuals will have an income af.er work- I icg years have passed. '■* JAMES W. SNIPES * j wSßnEiKk CAAK !^SrKENTUCKY Mm pintJf/JB|X. ABLEND 4/5 Qt 1 * •. :• *• ’i miunm inr ,vHw'*^'-v-■ >• ~^ , , K»<»»Y r‘‘» "u” iwco."?lw' OH wATiB AT H* C. ABC STORES S' ■■ , ■ •' >-*'< -■ *7 • ••••»•; -•••• | Jgpyjjg “ To Be Thursday Funeral service* for Staff Sgt. Hubert Daniel Byrd, J>:„ 21, will be held at the Baptist Church in! Bunnlevel Thursday at 4 p. m. The 1 Rsv. A. C. McCall, pastor, and the I Rev. Clary, pastor. of the Pres tjrterian Church, will officiate. | Burial will be in Harnett Memor ial Park near Lillington* with full j military honors. The body will be taken to the church at 3 p. m. Sgt. Byrd enlisted In the Air Force i February, IS4B. was trained as a gunnery instructor for the B-50 bomber. He had seen service in- Latoro and Guam. At the time of his accidental death April 1, he was stationed in England. He died in London from carbon monoxide pollening while cn leave. Surviving are his wife, the for mer Pafc.icia Sutton of Tucson, Ariz.; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Daniel Byrd of Bunnlevel; a brother, Richard Byrd of Bonn level; a sister, Mrs. Mary Lou Mat thews of Lillington; his paternal grandmother, M> s. L. D. Byrd of; Bunnlevel; and his maternal grand- j mother, M:s. J. H. Morgan of Lil- j lington, Route 1. Casting Begins For May Day Pageant Casting began among the stu dents of Campbell College this week for “The Cape Fear Schoolmaster," a pageant written by Tom Patter son, member of the faculty of the Carolina Playmakers at Chapel Hill’s University of North Caro lina, to be presented here on May 2 at the Paul Oreen open air theatre as part of Campbell’s May Day activities. Paul Green, native of Harnett and an alumnus of Campbell, gave valuable assistance out of his rich store of first-hand knowledge to Mr. Patterson in the Writing of the script, which will depict the history of Campbell College from Its In ception in 1887, as a one - room school house, to ■ its present day status as one of the leading Junior Colleges in the state. Robert R. Phebus, director of speech and dramatics at Campbell, said today that he had alrpady be gun casting for the pageant and / ’if; 1 ..**^ m B £ I F ALABASTER IS HONORED Bert Alabaster, left, retiring ipaster of the Dunn Masonic Lodge, is shown here last night as he was pre sented the Past Master’s Apron by Willie Moss, also a past master of the lodge. Mr. Alabaster, prominent Dunn business man, received high praises for his services to the lodge. (Daily Record Photo). would announce the cast sometime , next week. He said that there would be a round twenty students altogether in the pageant, which may become an annual event at Campbell. Incidentally Mr. Green, former If Husband Zigs Don't Call Him Oaf By ELIZABETH TOO MET (V) Staff Correspondent -I ] NEW YORK OP) lf you zlg I when your husband zags on the 1 1 dance floor, don’t call him a clum- i sy oaf. Just smllp sweetly and say ypu’re sorry. The advice comes from a young lady who spends ( most of her time Planting with her j husband. Multiply that occasional night the average married couple goes danc ing by enough to equal 368, and you have the dancing schedule of Bambl Linn and Rod Alexander, one of the most successful young dance teams. She’s been dancing since she was a child In Brooklyn. Rod took it up at the ripe old age of 20. Three yean ago they met and got married when both danced in a j Broadway musical. They've been 1 dancing together ever since. “We hardly ever say anything to each other when we’re dancing,” said Bambl, a slight, blonde girt with elfin charm. “Except if-some thing goes wrong. Then I say I’m sorry.” Her husband smiled at her af fectionately. They were sitting In a bare, dingy dance studio where they rehearse daily for their Sat urday night appearance on “The Show of Shows.” “We’re together all. the time,” Bambi said, “so we’d have to get along.*' £4 MUST be perfect Tq get to the top as a dance team these days a couple must be technically perfect as well as fresh and original. So the “I’m sorry” occasions are rare. "Eeople want perfection these d4ys,” sighed Mambi. “They’re more sophisticated be cause they’ve seen so much more good entertainment,” added Rod. "Tricks don’t impress them any more. They want dances with new ideas something that appeals to their imagination.” He has to come up with a new idea each week. From - Monday through Thursday the hard work ing couple perfects the dance in the barb rehearsal studio. Not until Friday does the rest of the cast see it. :ij ✓ “Sometimes everything seems to go wrong just at the last minute,” admitted Bambl, who is leas the worrier than her husb&pd. "Rod, remember the time we followed that; act that left jelly beans all over the floor?” He groaned. j But whatever happens affects both of them. “We’re even paid as ] a team,” Bambl said, “so I don't how much money I | P OHjMp'n % / I ■ ■ Ij V . 17ED Ij K // A«lr Enr Arm**" «* I : TWI ( 111 I rAKnkCn 9 >UrrLT vU» I ■ DDAiti ei ntivai k n I I® DAILr RECORD. DUNN. il. QL —■ —= ——— j I winner of the. best plays of the year and author of “The Lost Colony” is expected to attend' the first per formance on May 2 here, a day which will'mark the observance of the sixty-sixth year of the opera tion of the college. She does the family bookkeeping, however. This, she Implied, could be as much help toward a happy marriage as saying “pardon me” on the dance floor. , /Addison Brewingfon "The' House Mover" ,14 years experience Experienced Help Go Anywhere Satisfaction Guaranteed Phone 3858 Dunn, N. C. !. . J 111 Hill II II II ■ 111 WE WANT A CHANGE WE NEED A CHANGE IN DUNN'S CITY GOVERNMENT Let's Stop Waste, Extravagance And Personal Favoritism This Ad Sponsored By Citizens Who Favor Hon ■est, Efficient and Econo- Bfnieal Government. " ' “ ' ' "" 1 « 1 Johnson Cotton Company's "Farmers Pay Plan" NO DOWN PAYMENT I ——== HSLF THIS FALL...HALF SEXT FALL '' m Room Air Conditicners Refrigerator Prices |i T ’ rß= -ltj As Low As ..,. $209 95 I HOLDS I =================— = — ===== I 111 (I . > • 14.2 iq. Ft, of shelf area I \ J • Full-width freezer chest I _ _ • 2 cub. DDllKlh^ • Full-width Crisp-O-Lator I « v/ J[\ l/'-vJ • Adjustable shelve op* I I Top-to-Base refrigeration • Butter Saver cempartmeni A T ' ' V ] • Extra racks in the door jlfcfiUgiA I: I food! I fllAAtn 11 .1 lariilnr * v,noose looißiuTw 000 f Your home deserves the fined. • DELUXE DOUBLE-OVEN k _ King-size ovep plus ELECTS f AOABIftB i IS7 3 economy-size oven • Radiant- '***'* * 1 wall Hidden heat • 7-heat ■T • pnnicnATnn nnni cdathd istrssu- UUULIKhIUK uUULIKHIUK infra-red broilers. MOOll FB-200 the fieed. Here’s the freezer that really 1 Electric Ranges priced WBB> M . >n storing and selecting food. OS low OS SSKKBsSSr Separate fast freeze ■ '' : g . ' . compartment. Total of 10 - .1 VI "■ -j Btorage spaces for your foods. I #9*95 5-WAYautomatic Johnson Cotton Co. can arrange special terms with acceptable secur- I ity on the purchase of appliaaces and furniture. Pas lr2 this fall and 1-2 next fall. Buy now! Why watt? I NOW - YOU CAI SET THE APPLIANCE YOU HEED WITHOUT WAITING! <• *«SSE, . r •** —r '-V.•'**. t * ,* > .r —v,, ; ■ v v,- . so ' nV ' M. I Aniilisnf a I lanaptniAnf 1 i - ftDDllQiliv 1/ePai IIHCiII - i ■ ■ 7Zyi* in _ « . B ■fj.MlL irm QJiTLIinilL M* -MV br I9LIhL II wl/*v |\ I I Al R| y A I UUNNi Nw V* I PAGE SEVEN
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 15, 1953, edition 1
7
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