Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Feb. 24, 1954, edition 1 / Page 3
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WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 24, 1954 yßaptist Ladies' I Class Met Tuesday Kii-'_Meinbers of the T S L Class of t *2*® First Baptist Church met Tues v\ i day evening at eight with Mrs. R. L. Warren hostess. BsyjjNih. Durham Taylor led the de- Wdtional using the 13th Chapter of raMßUhew as the scripture basis for ■» inspiring talk on “Rich and Hffm Soil." She closed with prayer. ■Kjj%s. Locke Campbell presided 5 Muring the meeting and commiin'ty § |tniaston reports were given. Mrs. f stressed tithing and Mrs. ||Katd 'Wiggins spoke briefly on the b church expansion program. During the social hour Mrs. R. jjjjk. Duncan conducted a Bible Quiz ;mnC,aewai entertaining games. Spre. Warren's home was most at -Wraetivelv decorated with arrange tSaents of spring flowers. The r»- alfctshment table was covered with organdy cloth over green jjnd held a centerpiece of jona>>)l<- «nd yellow candles in silver candl» holders. Mrs. Tailor nou-ed R>>«- kfon tea and guest* helped them'el -5 'ges to chicken salad puffs, partv sandwiches, assorted home mad? ; : Cookies and hors d’ oeuvres. Approximately 30 members and I guests were present. Presbvfarinn Ladies I Hold Monthly Meet E,V Tltp Worsen n r the First P"es- Kb hyterlan Church held their month y h meeting Mondav evening at 8:00 in f b# church navlor. Mrs. C.‘M. Watson presided and f‘% opened the meet'pg wth efrlntnre j* Teadtng and prefer Minutes W“r« [2 read bv Mrs. C. E. Fltchett -tr., end pva flrane'al report given by Mrs p* Tom Rnval. RjvJg- Mrs O. O Wi”«n, Wo-'-’ MlssW had shs«»" nf the n-o - “The ygoriteee es O'"■ 6 ’ Wor’d OhrleSian fiOP”PPpitV ” M— ’yi■ ft V*- 1 Hpon wlen.i'H the he"V The World May Know" by 1 KIDNEYS MUST REMOVE b : EXCESS WASTE »»«ta*beck«*he.ioM of pep end energy, V rl headachw and dizziness mar be dua to tlor t- down of kidney function. Doctor* aar good C* f kidney function h very important to good b. ■ hearth. When tome everyday condition. *uch w aa atraaa and atrain, cauaea thla important , function to alow down, many folks suiter nag- St&U backacho—feel miaerable. Minor blad ; R oar Irritation* due to cold or wrong diet may ; I.V sunee setting up nighte or frequent pzeaages. f Don’t neglect your kldueya If theae condl. ■GK tioaa bother you. Try Doan'a Pilla-m mild Bap; Clara til. Uaed eucceesfully by million* for V, .poor 10yuan. It’* amazing how many time* [W Doan'a jive happy relief from these discom- I f forts—help the IS milesof kidney tubes and ftl jfc. tors dugh out wzate. GetDoan’l Pill* today! - • o "I want value || R for my automobile dollar!”^<J|^^ frnd&tr'T%e. solid value I Brother, now you're talking Plymouth's language! L We’d like to show you the biggest package of vatue-per-dollar ever offered : M; in the low-price field—the ggk* And we’d like to prove that value to you, by item. There’s the smoothness JHHHr _ n ; r of the famous Balanced Ride, plus safety \y ' — ' u and comfort features no other low-price Jjr w%j • ear can match. There are many other £ j I value features we want you to see- _ I; so, we invite you to come in, compare, (s!J@(sElU® O 3 j4k l |, wdtrtve the new Plymouth, soon! headquarters for vajue I. Uke to drive without shifting? Wf j Plymouth’s Hy-Driv« is the newest, smoothest no-shift drive in the wo field. And hy Plymouth's new. t ow * r **** rin ® S«» TV page tor tim« and station. IjawSgipl v i 1 SURPRISE PARTY Mr. and Mrs. J. D» Barnes and employees of Johnson’s Restaurant entertained at a surprise house warming for Mrs. Violet Patrick and a golng-away party for Miss Elsie Lucas on Tuesday evening at the new apart ment of Mrs. Pa-;:ck on W. Canary St. Miss Lucas will leave for 'California on Friday. An array of Charles W. Ranson. An offering was taken for world missions. A social hour followed in the rec reation room. Mrs. Adcox Hostess To Circle No. 1 Mrs. A. P. Adcox was hostess Monday afternoon at 3:30 to mem bers of Circle No. 1 of Divine Street Methodist Church. Mrs. H. P. Byrd gave the de votional and opening prayer and Mrs. J. L. Ward, leader, conducted a routine business session. Birth day money was collected and other items transacted. Bouquets of Jonquils decorated the home and the hostess served spice cake and coffee to Mrs. H. P. Byrd, Mrs. J. L. Ward. Mrs. Ira Lee, Mrs. D. H. Hood, Mrs. Hugh Prince, Mrs. Jim Wilson, Mrs. H. C. Turlington, Mrs. Mamie Ford, Mrs. L. C. Langston, Mrs. Lena Chappelle, Mrs. E. B. Brewer, Mrs. C. E. Broughton, Mrs. Fred Bag- lovely gifts were presented to both honorees and deUghtful refreshments werr enjoyed. Those shown in the picture above are, seated, In front': Mrs. Patrick and Miss Lucas, and baqk row (from 1. to r.) Mrs. Tom Ralph, Mr. and Mrs. Barnes, and Mis. Faison Pope. (Daily Record photo) Dr. C. W. Byrd Speaks To B & PW Tuesday Night Dr. Charles Byrd was guest speak er on Tuesday evening *when the Business and Professional Wom an’s Club met at Johnson’s for their monthly dinner meeting. Mrs. Lina Ennis gave the Invo cation and Mrs. Agnes Cannady, president, welcomed Mts. Janie Lowe, Mrs. Vara Lee Wilkins and Mrs. Mary Byrd Into the club as new members. Following the dinner, Miss Eula Jones, chairman of the Health and Safety Committee, Introduced Dr. Byrd, who gave a most Interesting gett, Mrs. Ralph Wade, and one visitor, Pttle Ida Prince Nelson of Asheville. THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. and informative talk. The speaker : dealt with diseases o i children-. and urged Immunization when pos ’ sible. He also stressed the Import ance of yearly check-ups for tu berculosis by x-ray and fluoroscope and touched on the dread diseases, polio and rheumatic fever. In con clusion, Dr. Byrd gave helpful hints i on home accidents and preventive measures. Mrs. Jessie Davis, chairman of Public Affairs gave a report on the B & PW reception at the Gover nor’s Mansion in Raleigh Satur day. She also urged members to vote their convictions March 2 on - the recreation program. Mrs. Del ete Clifford announced a meeting . at the Woman’s Club Thursday af ternoon for a discussion of the re- 1 creation vote. \ A, report was given on the club’s visit to Veteran’s Hospital by Mrs. Grace Stoain. The meeting was adjourned at the close of the business. PTA Has Program On North Carolina The Dunn Parent-Teacher Assoc iation met for their February meet ing Tuesday night at 7:30 In the high school auditorium. Mrs. Pat Lynch called the meeting to order and the objects of the PTA were read In unison. Using the Sermon on the Mount as the devotional topic, Mrs. H. C. Pridgen gave an Inspiring talk on the Lord’s Prayer. Minutes of the last meeting were read by Mrs. Bert Alabaster and a nominating committee com nosed of Mts. Ed Purdle, chairman, Keith Finch. Mrs. H. I*. Byrd and Wood ray Hill was appointed by Jhe pres ident. 'I * i ■ j Wayne' Justesen, the Recreation Commission, spdke so the group concerning the proposed vote for a recreation program in Diinn to be held bn March 2. The PTA went on reebrd as favoring the program. ' The program Chairman. Mrs. Pria een. introduced Miss Edith Horton, sixth grade teacher, who presented her pupils Hi a most Interesting program on North Carolina. Colored films made by Miss Horton on her visit to the mountains ip western North Carolina were shown and narrated bv the pupils. Appropriate songs by the group Interspersed the program throughout, which was con cluded with the toast to the Old North State. The meeting adjourned with the PTA Prayer. • 1 - ) Harnett Native Plac) Th*«J<iv . Mrs. Susie CamerOn Douglas. 64. died Tuesday morning at her home In Pine view. She was a native of Harnett Countv. daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Cameron. Funeral services were held Wednes day at 3 o’clock at Cameron H<H Church, conducted by the T. E. Nelson. Burial was In the churc-i cemetery. Surviving are her hus ■ Imzini Dr-Guild's Acts to |ifS||u| lIIuICIIIIIV ■»—4 myasUy fltof mt Mrs. Peacock Dies Wed. Morning Mrs. Sarah Leener Giles Peacock, 62, wife of Jasper E. Peacock, of Godwin, Route 1, died early Wed nesday morning while visiting her daughter, Mrs. Jasper Jackson of Autryville, Route 1. Mrs. Peacock suffered a stroke Tuesday night and died within a few hours. A native of Sampson County, she was the daughter of the late George and Sula Beaman Giles. She was a' member of Harr.Bu Primitive Sautist Church. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 3:00 from ‘.he Harnett Primitive Baptist , Church. Elder Luther Turner and Elder Millard Westbrook will offic ’ate and burial will follow in the church cemetery. The body will lie ’n state for one hour prior to ser vices. Surviving are her husband. Jac uer E. Peacock, Route 1, Godwin, three sons, Ellington Peacock of Fayetteville, Turlington Peacock and Burlington Peacock, both of Route Godwin: four daughters, M-s. Leamon Strickland, Route 2. Rose boro, Mrs. Olive Lee, Favetteville Mrs. Floyd E. Taylor, Route 1 Oodwin and Mrs. Jasjjer Jackson of Route 1, Autryville; two' sisters. Mrs. Avery Daniels of Salemburg and Mrs. John Sewell of Fayette ville; also 17 grandchildren. Shelley Winters To Get Divorce ROME W A Lawyer In Ven ice reported today that movie ac tress Shelley Winters and her Ital ian actor-husband Vittorio Gass man have agreed to a divorce. He said Miss Winters did not insist on dictating the girl Vittorio must marry next, as she had threatened to do. band, A. C. Douglas of Pineview; three sons, Cameron Douglas. Charles L. Douglas, both of Pine view, J. Lee Douglas of Tampa, Fla.: two daughters, Mrs. C. E. Cochrane r of Pineview and Mrs. D. H. Man ' gum of Cameron, Route 2; 1J grandchildren. Short Lengths Only doth'Joold |1«B t;<, ,9c i. Quality Prints mm lytfJßl LL SHEETING JUST RECEIVED wRh y<i- Wamsutta Fabrics I 40" Homespun beautiful new patterns. 0™« STKIAL News Shorts NEW ORLEANS (IF) Thou sands of free-wheeling tourists kept ] the French Quarter cash registers Jingling today as this lusty old city’s famed Mardi Gras season 1 roared toward its flaming climax with fantastic parades, exclusive balls a.n d restless pageantry The million-doUar show, tagged the only one of its kind in the nation, ends at midnight next Tues day as the 'tollin' of bells in his toric cathedrals signals the end of fun and frolic and the beginning of the 40-day Lenten season. WASHINGTON (01 Roderick J. Wilson, one of the "accusers” of Chief Justice Earl .Warren, was arrested by metropolitan police t >- day in the Senate Judiciary Com mittee room for subornation of per jury after he testified on the former California governor's nom ination. CHICAGO (IP) Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson to day expressed opposition to any wage increases for members of the 15 non-operating railroad unions. WILKES - Barre, Pa. (IF) Many terrifiea residents of this mining community remained away from their damaged homes today, fearing further earth shifts simi lar to surface upheavals which struck twice this week and caused more than one million dollars dam age. - More than 100 persons were routed from their beds Tuesday night as the earth in the Old River Road section began to buckle up wards, cracking the walls of homes and pushing sidewalks and streets . a foot in the air. ! CASTLE HAYNE, N. C. HFI Thomas L. Hamilton, ailing and repentant former imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, was released : from prison today. Papers directing his release were - received by prison camp officials : here this morning and Hamilton ! was freed immediately on parole. - However he did not at once leave ! the camp, located six miles north I of Wilmington. WASHINGTON (m A Marine aviator said today that 75 to M i per cent of his fellow flyers im prisoned' by the Communists in Korea had been Instructed to tell their captors everything they knew. The flyer. Maj. Walter R. Hams, testified in a Marine court of in quiry into false germ warfare confession signed and later repudi ated by CoL Frank H. Schwable. LONDON (IF) Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden said today that the Big Four foreign ministers conference In Berlin was “well worth while” even though it was “frustrating, disappointing and at . times near tragedy.” i WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. (IF) A medical examiner’s report said to day there was “no trace of cancer” In the body of Thomas J. Cannon, who was shot to death by his wife in what she described as a mercy killing. Mrs. Cannon. 54, now un der observation in the psychiatric ward of a hospital, told police Mon day night that her husband told her “I’ve got cancer" and begged her to shoot him. She fired a pis tol bullet into his brain and then wounded herself. PHILADELPHIA (IF) Former we'terwelght champion Joh n n v Bratton opens his campaign for another shot at the crown tonlrht when he tangles with his rough pud rugged New ’YJork neighbor Johnny Saxton in a 10-round bout at the Arena. DAYTON, O. (IFI A captured MIG-15. Russia’s No. 1 operational let flrhter, will be flown publicly for the first time In the U. S. to day for the benefit of news and cameramen. The plane, In which a renegade North Korean pilot escap ed to a United Nations air base In South Korea, and for which the United Stales paid SIOO,OOO. has been reasembled and made ready for flight FT. JACKSON, S. C. (IF) Two Ft Jhckson sergeants, charged with abusing a trainee by making him stand at attention near an or derly room stove, last night were found guilty of assault by a gen eral court martial, Army officials said today. The convicted men, Sgt. 1C Earley E. Brown, 21, of La France, S. C. t and Sgt Phillip B. PAGE THREE Willet, 21, Memphis, Temt, were sentenced to one year at hard la bor, bad conduct discharges and forfeitures of pay for the period. TOKYO im Air Force author ities bumped Cpi. Claude Batchelor, a reformed one-time Communist “peace fighter," off a plane loaded with hospital patients today and sent him home on another flight GARDEN CITY, Kan. (01 - Far mers who saw the'- topsoil, winter wheat and even fence* blown ;iw»y in one of the most destructive dirt storms since the dust bow! days of the mid-1930’s today appealed for ‘ federal financial aid. Political lead ers In nearby Colorado agreed the federal government should at least move to stop the loss of precious soil and prevent a second dust bowl. HANOI. Indochina (IF) French tod troops, opening a drive (s stamp out Communist guerilla act ivity In the Red River delta, mop oed up three secret Red strongholds in fierce hand-to-hand fighting ts day. The Baltimore Bullets sadly a greed todav that yoi# can’t beat a ruv like Bob Cousy in his own backyard. Eniovin? his best per fcrirance of the current National Basketball Association season, Cousy plavlng in Worcester, Mass., audi torium. the same court he starred on while attending Holy Cross, pac ed the Boston Celtics to an 111-110 trinle overtime victory over the Bul lets by netting 42 points Monday night. rEff»cf/v*fy K«Wtv«* ITCHY SKIN RASH vM bIMHd nllsf sou lion sssodH. bsrrsMisq. IWff, djls rwb-lMtsr. «ww. Mfw. H yes ori- ho. sen—. W* l **. sftMw toot. QlmptM. ri^vo«,wo!W lar <M4rsr sod dsllcsto aU*. tos» gsto? Un or Tabus, sad Wsodw Sum- , hold in Dunn by Dunn Phannaey* Thomas (Walgreen), and Hood Drug Btoroa.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Feb. 24, 1954, edition 1
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