.
2
a their
on their own 20 yard line
..
ysre line, a
down tile middle gain
OPthing and quartrback Ricky
sent Halfback Mike
around right end for 5 yards
Angler 35.
took over on their own
lie first play made no
on second and 10 lost
on a fumble, Dunn re
! on the Angier 36 yard line,
two plays Dunn’s Hardison
i 9 yards to the Angier 27.
Twyford picked up the first
to the Angler 23 yard line,
tick Gregg Register went off
guard and was thrown foj
ft’Y'pne yard loss to the Angier
24..’Two pass plays and a left end
sweep failed to gain the first
down and Angier took over on
fcler gained a first down to
tt# 40 and through the middle
o&ithe line for first down on the
DtfAn 48 as the quarter ended.
Guunn intercepted a pitch out on
the 50 yard marker and ran all
the way for a touchdown to start
second quarter. The extra
try failed. Dunn led 6-0.
ier took the kick-off and
rned it to their 48 yard line
Two plays failed to gain, but An
gier gained to the Dunn 38 yard
line cn a right end sweep.
-ban——— ..-—
yhft
ijafey
Dear Althea,
\l can't decide whether
/ like Half and Halts
for their rich taste
or mild flavor."
Dear Smoker,
'Why bother? Justfe
enjby both.” .Mm
Dunn’s left end Jimmy Jen-eu
stopped another end sweep for
a four yard loss on the Dunn 40.
Dunn took over on downs. Har
dison gained 5 and Register was
stopped for no gain Hardison
moved the ball to the Angier 15
where a penalty set the ball back
I on the Angier 20
Angier intercepted a pass on
i the Angier 15. A series of plays
! produced no gain. The first half
j ended with a 3 yard gain aroaMj
I leftend.
Angler received the second half
kick-off. Angier w«s forced to punt
| after losing yardage on consecu
! live plays. Hardison took the punt
| on the Angier 40 and retained
| it for a touchdown. Bubba Twy
I ford bulled his way across for
i the extra point and Dunn led 13-0.
Ain>i:r again was forced to pant
as tne Dunn line tn-e* t-*# ncu
carrier for josses of 3 and 4 yards.
The kick was blocked and Dunn
took over on the Angier 40. Har
dison gained the first down on
the 20 as the third quarter end
ed.
Dunn opened the fou; th quar
ter nOth a series of plays that
produced their 3rd touchdown.
The extra point try mas stopped
and Dunn had a comfortable 14-0
lead.
Angier again was faced with the
problem of cracking the Dunn de
fensenac and was forced to punt ag
ain after a 2 yard los3 to their own
38 when stopped by Jimmy Jer
rell. The punt was blocked and
recovered by Mike Paham on the
Angier 40.
Three plays produced no yard
age and Register carried to the
Angier 16 and fumbled, Angier j
recovered* Jerrell and Mann
teamed up end threw Angier for j
a 6 yard loss. Two passes failed
and Angier got a poor kick off
and Dunn returned it to the An- I
gier 6.
Gregg two plays later scored
the touchdown, but Dunn was off
sides- Another penalty brought it
back to the Angier 11. “
The game ended with Dunn on
the Angier 6 yard line. Final score
Dunn, 19—Angier 0.
Dunn is proud to have a fine
Pee Wee Football Program and
its coaches, Doug Beasley and
Henry Willis.
Thanks is expressed to the par- ,
ents tor their assistance and to
Mrs. Margaret Hemminsway and
the Pee Wee Cheerleaders for a
splendid Job well done.
I
WAKE UP
LAZY MONEY
Savings & Loan Association of Dunn
30Q W Edgerton
WATER BUNNY—‘ Fatso” looks anxious to get out of
the pool, but it was no terrible accident that got him
into the water in the first place. “Fatso” is a way-out
jackrabbit whose idea of a good time is a dip in the pool
with his master, 10-year-old Jeff Hofman of Miami, Fla.
STATE
REPORT
BY STATE SENATOR
VOIT GILMORE
EAMAHCAND'S MISSING POOL
. . In another two years the
state's correctional school for girls
at samarcand, Moore County,
Will begin its fiftieth year fifty
full years of no swimming pool
t is're for girls between the ages
of 10 and 16 and who are “con
fined t° campus1’ the year around
by order of juvenile courts. It’s
a pity. To match the $32,000
challenge fund established by the
recent General Assembly for a
new pool at Samarcand, the cam
paign is now on for the other
$32,000 which must come from
private sources. Mrs. Dan Moore
is serving as my co-chairman in
the effort to have the 300 girls
at samajj^nri splashing in a new
p joI by next summer.
Recently I spoke to the Wo
men’s Club of Troy. Their thank
yob present to me was a check
for the Samarcand Swimming
Pool fund I will make a lot more
speeches for that kind of pay.
FOR THE CHILDREN . . . The
October 2 school consolidation
vote in Moore County cut deep.
Peelings were intense as voters by
a total of 3385 to 2:62 acted to
merge the independent Southern
Pines and Pmehurst school sys
tems into the county system. At
the same time the county defeat
ed by 1-2 votes a proposal to al
low the county commissioners to
levy a special supplemental school
tax of op to 30 cents.
What happens now? The com
missioners within 60 days will
appoint a new county-wrde seven
man school board to operate the
present county system and be
gin steps toward absorption of
the Southern P.nes and Pinehursf
units into the one-county system
in 1967. A new consolidated high
school in lower Moore County
is proposed. In view of the de
feat of the county wide supple
mental tax, patrons of the propos
ed new school area in lower
Moore may now establish their
own special tax with proceeds to
be applied exclusively to schools
within their area.
Meantime, a Pinehurst-Southrn
Pines lawsuit which challenges
the legality of the consolidation
action is headed through the courts
toward the Supreme Court. The
Attorney General, whose office
drafted the Moore’ County school
bill as directed by the cunty com
miasionrs, has called the consoli
dation vote legal and proper.
INTANGIBLE TAX . . . Bally
around, all who want to banish
the Intangible Tax. It infuriates
people who move here from oth
er states, however, since most
of the tax is returned to city and
county treasuries there is consid
erable resistance to its abolition.
Let me make two suggestions to
foes of the Intangibles Tax:
First, find out how much it now
yields per year to your city and
County treasury, then figure a
way to replace that revenue from
another source. Second, prepare
your arguments for presentation
to th new commission to study
N, C. revenue sources which was
authorized by the 1965 General
Assembly and appointed last week.
I will gladly assist any group
that wishes to confer with the
new commission.
LIQUID BREAKFAST ... If we
want to help farm products, we
should look into Cornell Univer
sity’s new balanced breakfast
! concoction: a chilled 8 ounae^^ar
ton containing pasteurized apple
juice and one fresh egg- Nutri
tious, tasty, quick—and 100 per
rent Tar Heel ingredients.
THE BIG SWITCH . . . The
Mental Health Board, after its
summertime rush to switch men
tally retarded children from one
treatment center to another, has
slowed its gait. Parents of chil
, dren scheduled for recent trans
, fer from Murdoch to O’Berry
Center, for example, have now
received official letters advising,
"•the transfer of residents between
the North Carolina centers is tt»
be temporarily postponed . . . This
postponement is felt ... to be
necessary in order that the vari
ous institutions might have an
opportunity to objectively evaluate
programs . .
It was no secret th'at parents
were upset and confusion among
hospital personnel was consider
erable as a result of the crash
program to distribute patients to
centers across the state on a
geographic rather than racial
basis. Even though Governor
i Moore last month visited various
j centers and termed the . “big
: switch” sotisfactory, families of
patients continued to pepper
Mental Health Board members
with complaints that' the delicate
; balance of many patients’ welL
i being was in jeopardy. A Ran
! dolph County group which I ac
companied t° Raleigh told auth
orities that transferring their
children from Durham County to
Lenoir County actually put them
farther away from home
The state has now proved to
federal officials its good faith in
proceeding to end racial segrega
tion of mentally retarded cases.
The new postponement for "eval
uation of programs’’ is a humani
tarian step to avoid damage to
young minds which often hang in
a delicate balance.
COUNTY PLANNING . . . Junk
yards, roadside signs and trash
disposal are phoblems which pla
gue county commissioners today
Ten of North Carolina's 94 non
metropolitan counties now have
county planning programs under
way or about to begin. Their
gal is completion of a land De
velopment Pian for the county,
backed up by ordinances needed
to guide future (development.
As areas outside- towns grow,
county officials increasingly see
the need for zoning to protect
new community college and pub
lic school sites, residential and
industrial areas County planning
also should analyze the adequacy
of parks, airports, fire stations
and similar facilities, with a
schedule for improving them as
needed Is your countf planning
1 ahead?
| between sessions .
; Someone asked th other day if
there was much for a State Sen
ator to do inbetween sessions of
trying to earn a living that is- So
the General Assembly. Besides
I kept a log of ne week’s activity
during October:
There were 12 visits from coil,
constituents 18 letters and 14
phone calls, half of the calls be
tween midnight and breakfast.
Two people aqoght better roads.
A service man’s wife wanted help
In getting her husband discharg
ed or else transferred to a post
wher* she could live with him. A
cancer victim wanted assistance
in contesting a disability claim
Which the federal government
had denied- Two men wanted
jobs, one is Raleigh and the oth
er in Washing tort. A Service sta
tion operator asked how he could
, persuade the Hiihway Depart
ment to trim trees along the
right-of way so that his sign
would Be more visible to motor
ists- A young mother> about to
lose her children to a foster
home, needed financial relief
while l,er husband underwent
m.deal treatment.
Human problems never end
They are a challenge to me and
I always am grateful if I can lend
a helping hand
FARM CENSUS ... The 1936
Agriculture reports show 381,000
acres of farm lands in Randolph
County; 209,000 acres in Harnett;
1 21,000 acres in Moore; 138,000 ac
res in Hoke; and 114,000 acres In
Lee. Hoke had 14,000 acres in
cotton while Randolph had only
18 acres. Harnett had 13,000 acres
in tobacco; Hoke trailed with 2,
3on acres. Randolph led the five
counties in number of hens and
pullets of laying age with 145,
000. also in total of beef and milk
cews and heifers with 10,000. In
e»ch of the five counties, the
| l umber of people living on farms
declined from the year before.
1““=
HARNETT FAIR WINNERS
There was a total it IS entries
lb the wool needlework contest at
the N. C. State Fair this year. 1
Mrs. John D. Champion of Fu
quay Vafina was the first piece
winner with her entry of a crochet
ed three place baby set and Betty j
S. Denning of Route 2, Angier, won
third place with her entry of a
knitted three piece baby set.
In the poultry division the Wom
ble-Hatley Poultry Farm of Lil
Ungton was placed fourth in the
Egg Show with their large size
white shell eggs.
Dunn Teacher
Feature Speaker
Miss Lina L. Culbreth, a teach
er at the Harm tt High School
will be the guer.t speaker Sunday
evening 6:00 at the Mingo Hill Free
Will Baptist Church when the ush
er Board observes its anniversary.
Miss Culbreth, an outstanding
educator and church woman, is a
graduate of Winston-Salem State
Teachers College, member of the
Trinity A.M.E. Zion Church and
is supervisor of the Youth Depart- \
ment of the Central North Carolina
Conference of the A.M.E. Zion
Church.
Mrs. Blue is president of the
Mingo Hill usher board and the
Rev. Clifton Rouce is the pastor.
The public is cordially invited to
hear Miss Culbreth.
James O. McLear
Completes Course
FORT JACKSON, S. C. (AH7NO
_ Army Pvt. James O. McLean,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Me
Lean, Route 2. Box 317, LUllngton,'
N. C., completed a light vehicle
driver conrss at Fort Jackson, S.
&, Oct J4.
During the course McLean re
ceived instruction in tne operatfon
,nd maintenance of military ve
hicles up to and including the two
and one-half ton truck.
The 18-year-old soldier attended
Shawtown High School.
Jhe (DjcuIu Hpxvhd
DUNN, N. C
Publishing By
RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY
406 E. CUMBERLAND 8T.
Entered a* second-class matter In the Post Oft'oe hi hnun, N. O.
under the laws of Congress. Act of March S, 1879.
Every Afternoon, Monday through Friday.
Second-class postage paid »t Dunn. N. C.
••UT-OF.STATE — $10.50 per year In advance: $6.50 for st* months:
$4.00 for three months pins tax.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BT CARRIER — 25 CENTS PF.R WEEK
»N TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND RURAL
INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA — $8.00 Per Y<-ar; $4.50 foi sit months}
$3.00 for three month*.
I
NOTICE OF OPENING OF
Harnett County Recistration Books
FOR THE RECISTRATION OF QUALIFIED VOTERS
I
Notice is hereby given that the Registration Books will open
in t?«e several precincts ot Harnett County on Saturday. Oct.
9, 1965. at 9:00 o'clock a. m. ;o enable qualified and unregist
ered electors to register and to vote in the General Election
on Nov. 2, 1965. The Registration Books will remain open
through Saturday, Oct. 30, 1965 and the. Registrars will ire
at their rrajtoi.Uve Precincts for the performance of their
duties ei- Saturday, Oct. 9; Saturday, Oct. 16; and Saturday,
Oct. 2?, between the h: urs of 9 a. m. until sunset.
The following are designations of the respective vol ing places in the several Precincts together with the
names of the respective Registrars:
ANDERSON CREEK
Polling Place: Hill's Garage, Bunnlevel R-l
E. L. Hill, Bunnlevel, R-l
AVERASBORO NO. 1
Polling Plaice: W & S"Motor Co., Dunn
Mis. Catherine H. Norris
AVERASBORO NO. 2
Polling Place: Dunn Municipal Building
Mrs. George W. Williams, Dunn
AVERASBORO NO. 3
Polling Place: Auto Sales &, Service, Dunn
Ralph Wade, Dunn
AVERASBORO NO. 4
Polling Place: Dunn Armory
Mrs. Charles Stewart, Dunn
BARBECUE
Polling Place: Community Bldg.
Mrs. Inez Howard, Sanford R-6
BLACK RIVER
Polling Place: Angier Municipal Bldg., Angier
Leonard Ogburn, Angier
BUCKHORN
Polling Place: Spence's Store
Carlyle Blanchard, Fuquay R-l
DUKE NO. 1
Polling Place: Across From Post Office
Allene Bethune, Erwin
DUKE NO. 2
Polling Place: Erwin Park Center
Olive Wilkerson, Erwin
DUKE NO. 3
Polling Place: Erwin Gym
Mrs. Jackie Denning, Erwin
GROVE NO. 1
Polling Piace: Stewart's Garage, Coals
Mrs. T. O. Beasley, Coats
GROVE NO. 2
Polling Place: Coats Municipal Bldg’.
Mrs. Clarence Hough, Coats
HECTOR'S CREEK
Polling Place: Bradley's Garage
Paul Bradley, Kipling
LILLINGTON
Polling Place: County Courthouse
Mrs. Paul McDonald, Lillington
NEILL'S CREEK NO. 1
Polling Place: Community Bldg.
Reid Johnson, Lillington R.1
NEILL'S CREEK NO. 2
Polling Place: Blackmon Bldg.
Preston Butts, Buies Creek
STEWART'S CREEK (Bunnitvel)
Polling Place: Community Building
Thomas J. Byrd, Bunnievel, R-l
UPPER LITTLE RIVER NO. 1
Polling Place: O'Quinn Store
Arnold Collins, Lillington R.3
UPPER LITHE RIVER NO. 2
Polling Place: Car1 Mr Neill's Store
Blanch Johnson, Broadway R-l
BE SURE YOU ARE REGISTERED; OTHERWISE, CONTACT YOUR REGISTRAR.
From 9 am to 3 pm on Saturday, Oct. 30,1965, will be challenge day.
Harnett County Board of Elections
DOtlGALD McRAE, Chairman
V