Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Sept. 12, 1955, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX Jo Lumsden Entertained Office Staff Miss Joe Lumden of Dunn en tertained the office staff of Har nett County Welfare Department Thursday night at her home here, prior to a dinner held at Johnson's Restaurant. (Mixed summer flower arranae ments were used in an at-racttve centerpiece on the dining rev—. tabie. The hostess served delicious re freshments consistine of ham. bis cuits. hors d’oeuvre, and punch Those present were: Mr and Mrs. Carl Byrd, Mr and Mr* Roger Hawley, Miss Milfred Brad shaw, all of Lillington. Miss Betty Cannon of Bunnlevet, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Breeden of Lilliniron. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. McKnieht. Jr. of Buies Creek. Mr and Mrs. Woody Maynard of Apex. Miss Frances Wall of Raleigh and Er win, Charles Williams of Dunn, and Mrs MagtOrie Richey of An gler. MR. GILES DIES Mr. W. H. Giles, ape 63, of St, Pauls. Route two, died Sunday afternoon at 5:30 at Highsmith’s Hospital in Fayetteville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at this time. Among his survivors are sister, Mrs. S. R Naylor of Dunn. Dooh l«t FAINS hoodoebo, Mwaifio or aching avtclot got yo» down I Tho cowbmohon of foil acting ingredient* in STANBACK TABLETS bring* qekfc comforting reKef. Keog STANBACK on hond, end when pah* ttrihe* Fall Fashion THE BOXY SUIT ... The Best-Dressed Look For The Fall The height of styles and values! Our fully-lined jack et with cardigan neckline and matching skirt in sil ver-flecked tweed. Self belt accents the lower-look waist line. Black, brown. Sizes 10- 18. only $16.50 Lederßros. E. Broad St DUNN. N. C. Patsy Bryant Was Honored On 9th Birthday Patsy Bryant was honored on her 9th birthday with a par:y Sunday afternoon at 4:00 by her mother, Mrs W C Bryant Many -srames were enjoyed during the aftemooon. Pa'sy opened her many v.fts after which everyone enjoyed refreshments consisting of cookies potato chips, ritz crackers, cancy and birthday cake and pink k lonade Bailoons were given as, i&VOT* Those attending were. Gaines W.iKenwaber. Tommy Foster. Dou glas and Ronnie Heath. Kenneth Makey, George. Connie and Mona La Fontaise. Jimmie, Gi'enda and Gale Lee, Andy Barefoot, Ginny and Becky Spell. Phvlis Tew, Linda Rase Bryant. Janet Adams. Becky Lee, Janet Se-ssoms. Priscilla Bry ant. Pauline Bryson. Annette Dor man Lula Horton, Mary Ann Hairs. Sylvia and Romona Tew. Wanda Fairclot.h and Betty Jean Lee Miss Turlington Entertains At Coke Party Miss Virginia Turlington enter tained at a Coca Cola party Sat urday morning at 11:00 o'clock for Misses Alice Prince and Kathryn Thomas. Miss Prince will leave Thursday for Durham where she will enter Duke University as a freshman. Miss Thomas leaves Monday for Buie’s Creek where she will enter Campbell College Stationery and pens were the hostess’ gifts to the honorees. During the morning the hostess served delicious refreshments con sisting of Coca Colas, sandwiches, and cookies to the guests. Those attending the social court esy, in addition to the honorees, were: Misses Barbara Reddish. Mar garet Virginia Vann, Joyce Godwin, Ethelyn Maxwell, Jean Young, Jean Ennis, Mary Allred. Janice Fowler, and Alice Stewart. GRAYBEAL-CHAPIN Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Chapin of Liliington have announced the en gagement of their daughter. Miss (Mary Elizabeth Chapin to the Rev. DaFes B Graybeal, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Graybeal of Lansing. Rev Graybeal is the pastor of the MontvieW Presbyterian Church of Winston-Salem. The wedding, is planned for fall. DUNN FURNITURE COMPANY fRIGIDAIRE NOW PERMANENT LIFE INSURANCE AT A REDUCED PREMIUM FOR THE FIRST THREE YEARS I New York Life’s LM-3 (LIFE MODIFIED-3 POLICY) . Annual Annual Avurapu TODAY— you can jet at least premium premium payment #5,000 of permanent protec- f ln i «during tion for your family at a low l * , “* j »». 30 yra* rate. Phyaical examination may not bo necessary if you’re in 25 >*2.70 $97.30 $74.441 good health and between ages 10 and 40. 35 111.10 130.70 101.1 t THRU YC4JIS FROM NOW 45 161.25 119.70 146.65 the premium increases 1 ■■ —< slightly. But baaed on the pree- -If annual dMdaad b ewt scale, dividends can be toward payment el the premium ■sad to reduce payments to —baaed oa the Company's MM Isas Aon the triffuM rale—an Dividend mnrtration Seals and shown in chart. Cash vnkxe latesest Rstn. This is ns* ngnsr keep grrrwmg. 1 jt ■ wR$ • •»RotepAoo# in or w A. B. SMITH, JR. Special Agmi HEM YORK LIFE INSURAWX CO. Box 550 DUNN, N. C. TeL 2883-2302 ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED Miss Darlene Faye Pope of Raleigh is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. William Taft Pope of Dunn, Route 1. who announce her engagement to Anthony S. Costa son of Mrs. Hans Costa of New Beaford, Mass., and the late Mr. (Costa. The wedding is plan ned for October 8. Mrs. Julia Senter Died Friday In Kipling Mrs. Julia Green Senter. 86. of Kipling, widow of Robert Sente l -, died Fridav at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Cyrus M. Matthews ofg Fuquay Springs, after a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Matthews and Mrs. Carlie Hamil ton of Kipling; one son. H. C. Sen ter of Kipling; 11 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Funeral services were held Sun day at 3 p.m. at Kipling Methodist Church by the Rev. I. J. Straw bridge and the Rev. S. J. Starnes. Burial was in Olive Branch Ceme tery. IN DURHAM Mrs. P. B Lamm is spending a few days with relatives in Dur ham. WEEKEND GUESTS Dr. and Mrs. Gerald James had as their weekend guests, Dr. and Mrs. G. R. Hammond of Wilson, Dr. and Mrs. W. B. Suggs of Golds boro and Dr. and Mrs. Van Rhodes of Smithfiei'd. AT MONTREAT Ann Fox, daughter of Mrs. Bes sie Fox of Coats left Friday for Montreat where she entered Moo treat College as a Junior. LEAVES TODAY Laney Hodges left this morn.ng for Red Springs where she entered Flora Macdonald College as a freshman. Laney will major in music at the coliege. Tart's Modern Barber Shop "WE NEED YOUR HEAD IN OUR BUSINESS" Prop. A. E. Tart Sherrill William THE DAILY RECORD, DUNA, N. C. Bride's Father Officiates At Linden Rites Officiating at the marriage of Miss Mary Dickson Arrowood and Clifford A. Hopson Saturday at the Sardis Presbyterian Church of Linden was the Rev. Robert S. Ar rowood. father of the bride. Miss Ruth Sykes, soloist, and Miss Lisar Anderson, organist, both of Greensboro, presented the nup tial music Miss Katherine Arrowood was her sister’s only attendant. She wore a ballerina-length gown of pale green taffeta. A matching tulle veil and pearls former ner head dress and she carried Talisman roses. The bride, who was given tn mar riage by her great uncle. Dr. Char les E. Hodgin of Greensbo.o, chose a ballerina-length gown of anti que taffeta, and Spanish ace em broidered with seed pearls. A pearl headdress held her finger-tip ve:l of tulle, and. like her honor at tendant, she carried Talisman rases. Robert S. Arrowood Jr., brother of the bride, was the best man. and, the ushers included Dr. Robert M. McMillan of Southern Pines, a cousin of the bride, Carlyle Wil liams, Wayne Collier, and George Elliott, all of Linden. Mrs. Hopson is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Robert 8. Ar rowood of Linden. She is a gradu ate of the Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina, and for the past two years, she has (been employed by the Central Young Women's Christian Associa tion in Baltimore, Maryland. Mr. Hopson is the son of Mrs. Eric E. Hopson of Mill Valley, California, and the late Mr. Hopson. He is a graduate of Stanford Univ ersity with a B. .S degree in ge ology, the University of Washing ton with a M. S. degree and u a candidate for a Ph. D. from John Hopkins University. He is a mem ber of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, Si gma Xi, and Phi Beta Kappa. The couple will make their home in Baltimore where Mr. Hopson is assistant professor of geology at John Hopkins University. A reception at the home of the bride followed the ceremony. Rotary Club Fetes Teachers Fifty-five Dunn schoolteachers, 1 including ten who have not taugnt here before this year, were intro duced to the Rotary Club on Fri day evening. Rotary held a special dinner meeting in honor of the teachers. The evening’s principal speaker was Dr. Amos Abrams, editor of North Carolina Education, official magazine of the North Carolina Teachers which goes to about 25,000 of them. President Lonnie Baldwin of Rotary made a brief welcoming speech to the teachers, who were individually introduced by A. B. Johnson, district principal of Dunn schools. Dr. Abrams was introduced by J. Shep Bryan. Dr. Abrams lives in Raleigh. DUNN HOSPITAL Following is a list of patients who have been admitted to the Dunn Hospital during the past weekend: Mr. Bill Bryant, Master Gary L. Darden, Mrs. Margaret hillips, Mrs. Shirley Jean Bass, Doris McLean, Baby Frances Ro binson, Mildred Bailey, Mr. Henry West, Mrs. Edna Core, Miss Con nie Dorman, Mr. David A. Price, Willy Morrison,Jr., Mrs. Lila John son, Mrs. Thelma Jean Moore, Joe Wimberly, Master Ricky Lu cas, Miss Maggie Shaw, Mrs Ge orge T. Eason, Miss Pansie Jean McLamb, Mrs. Margaret Phillips, Mr. Luther Johnson, Alvin Dud ley, Mrs. Polly Kirby, Mrs. Jackie Tart, Mrs. Let ha Proctor, Mr.. Ro bert Mclntosh, Mr. William G. Ray nor, Mrs. Marline Brown, and Ben Milfred. WOMAN’S CLUB TO MEET— The Woman’s Club will meet at the Club House Tuesday afternoon at 4:00 p. m. This is the first bus iness meeting of the club since the spring meetings. AVAILABLE Hovn^r ugr Browning iQF AUTOMATIC The Aristocrat of Automatic Shotguns J. A. Holmes Hardware 8. Ends PhoM MU Authocissd MOWMHO DnMst COMES OF ACE —This informal portrait of Britain’s Princess Margaret, with her pet dog, was taken by photographer Cecil Beaton in the garden o; Clarence House, L.ondon, in honor of her 25th birthday. In royal circles, a princess “comes of age’’ when she is 25. Margaret’s co >V 1 o at: kes on added Import be cause of much speetd; lien : i her choice ol’ a nusband. At 25, she is free to n. . > • *.an's consent, providing she gives Farliai.i...i : no objectioa u raised in Parliament SCOTT TAKES ACTION RALEIGH (Ut Sen. W. Kerr Scott sent his administrative as sistant, Ben Roney, to Washington today to seek payment by federal agencies of the full cost of soil treatment to restorre croplands covered by salt water in Eastern North Carolina after hurricanes last month. Why Advertise? Those who do not advertise their business often find they don’t have a business to advertise. CAROLINA TYPEWRITER & Add. Machine Service s#B E. Canary St. Dunn, N. C Phone 3614 1 Day Service WAIT! Don t Leave The FOUR COUNTY FAIR MONDAY THRU SATURDAY UNTIL YOU HAVE SEEN THE COLEMAN HEATINC AND COOLING EXHIBIT Coleman Offers Mere And Mere And Mere! BASS ELECTRIC COMPANY DUNN, N. C. Why Advertise? Those who do not advertise their business often find they don’t have a business to advertise. Give Us A Trial J. P. LEE'S TEXACO Now Open In The Quinn Shopping Center. We Wel come You To Dunn’s New Ultra Modern Service Sta tion. WASHING GREASING COMPLETE TEXACO LINE MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 12, 1t»55 Home-Decorating T ime Is Crucial For Women NEW YORK OP* One of ths crucial situations in a women's life is the decorating of her home and “at no time .. is a woman more apt to go to pieces,” a psy chiatrist said today. Home-decorating also is a period of great marital turmoil. Dr. Mil ton R. Sapirstein. a staff psycHia trist of the Kingsbridge Veterans’ Hospital here, wrote in the Septem ber issue of Harper’s Magazine. ‘‘The average husband, during the decorating period, regards his wife as a crazy woman, while she considers him an unfeeling lout,” Dr. Sapirstein wrote. “There is usually more than a grain of truth in both assumptions;” Unbalancing Crises The strain of choosing major purchases and weathering the con- j fusion that surrounds decorating 1 unbalances women "who have sue cessfully weathered all the major, crises.” the psychiatrist said, be cause of underlying significance in the decorating task. “Sooner or later every woman decorating a home has to make up her own mind and reveal what she has always tried to conceal, from her own eyes as tvell as others’ her inmost self,” he said. It is hardest on women with “ob sessive personalities’’ who demand too much of themselves and are inclined to be unusually orderly and careful, the psychiatrist said. "Some such women bog down at the very beginning, putting off from week to week and month to month the necessary preliminary steps.” he said. “Others start over ■ and over. These are the woman 5/in summer.think Winter Is On The sJway, Let Us Check And Fill Your Fuel Tank Now. ■iiaililiiiiiiiiiiinßM- IlSl ESEHEESUSKHIH who, in the ordinary course of af fairs are constantly re-arranging the furniture sometimes even get ting up in the middle of the night to try out a new grouping.” The people a woman turns to for help only make her problems worse Dr. Sapirstein said. Paranoids with Grudges “Among the assorted workmen she is obliged to deal with—the plasterers, paiaters, paperhangers, and plumbers—there is a dispro portionately large number of para roid personalities, men who seem to bear a permanent grudge against the human race,” he wrote. ‘‘They do not attempt to disguise their hostility: it manifests Itself*-• in sllenness, rude and intemperate language and frequently in sloppy performance. When reproVted. they are likely as not to walk off the job.” Turning to a professional decor ator is ’jumping from the frying pan into the fire,” the psychiatrist warned. “The professional decorating field has become a happy stamping ground for misfits of all kinds, among them a large number off homosexual males and feroc’ously aggressive females. With few- ex ceptions. these people are funda mentally hostile to the normal pur poses of homemaking. v . their be havior is notoriously high-handed. It’ simplifies their operaton when they can undermine any confidence the client may have in her own judgment, and they have develop ed skilled techniques for reducing refractory customers to a pulp of submissiveness.”
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 12, 1955, edition 1
6
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