'•vvsr Dunh Show This Weekend ny Horses Expected horses from a half along the Atlantic will be arriving here weekend for what is ex 's of North Caro rse shows. forth Carolina, New Jersey,. Maryland ssee are expected to be included in the state’s represent ed The show will begin at 7:30 on Friday nigh‘, go through morn ing, afternoon and night sessions on Saturday and a final afternoon session on Sunday. The championshiu classes will be run off Sunday. The show will be held at 4-A farms owned by Mr. and Mrs. Ai Wuilenwaber. Special facilities, including lights for night showing are being set up. Dozens of temporary stalls bleachers for spectators and spe cial places for cars around the ring are included in the facilities. The Dunn Shrine club is putting on the show. They are raising money here to erect a Shrine Club headquarters. Ermon Godwin .president of the club, said today he is looking for a large crowd. Over $3,000 in cash, trophies and ribbons will be given winners in the various divisions. Many local riders are planning to exhibit in some of the divisions which run from equata(ion to jumping classes on thru scores of other class showings. Presilent Godwin said he hop ed to make it an annual affair. Only the Blowing Rock Horse show and one held yearly at Plne hurst are expected to be 'larger' than the one here. The one at . Blowing Rock P(i"h August is the [ iargrft in he nation outside of .he annua! Nations! Horse show I at Madison Square Garden In New York. Some of the south’s finest rid ers will be here for the show. There will be two rings set up. One, the main ring, has already been set up. The other, for Jump IngrwHT be -§&t up this week. A five to six acre parking Jot has been set up for the spectators to bring their Cars in. Admission to the Grand Stand will be $1.00 a Performance. Persons wishing to purchase spaces for their cars may do sj a $15.00 for the show. Members of the Shrine Ciub have tickets and they can also be purchased at Thomas Walgreen Drug Store They can. of course, Also be pur chased at showtime at the show j grounds at the 4.A farm. Mr. and Mrs. wul]en»vaber are ioing everything possible to make :he show a sucre Wl" ■11111 ■■■F lywww—111—mwMHHii ... to COMPLETE HERE — The Duke of Burling >a will show onrfar addle and in harness. He is rid den by Cindy Williams and owned by Martin “Re 1“ Mitchell „i Burlington. The Duke has an enviable record of winning and will compete in the Horse Snow sponsored by Dunn Shrine Club at 4-W Horse Farm. November 12, 13 and 14. Larry D. Boan Finishes Course FORT GORDON. Ga. (AHTNCf — Pvt. Larry D. Bonn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar E. Boan, 602 Black man si.. Benton, N. C., completed ; a nine-week communications ceiiter I specialist course at lh? Army South eastern Signal School, Fort Gor ! don, Ga„ Nov. 5. 5-plow power off All-Purpose 'W& FORD Commander 6000 • Powerful six-cylinder engine—Available with diesel, gas, LFG. e Four-wheel stability—Heavy-duty front axle, short wheel base and turning radius. e Power-shift Select-O-Speed transmission is standard. e Dual ratio PTO-Standard PTO speed at either of two engine speeds. o Powr-Stor hydraulics—Fast, uniform action at all operat ing engine speeds. • Comfortable and convenient—Big, adjustable, foam covered contour seat—two-position steering wheel—power steering—power disc brakes—roomy platform. Come in amt tee this big new Commander 6000 FORD QUALITY TRACTOR .6171 Bo an was trained in the use of teletype sets, tape relay operations and in the operation of long dis tance communications equipment. The 18-year-old soldier, entered the Army in June 1965 and com pleted ha ic combat training at Forj Jackson, S. C. He is a 1965 graduate of Bensor High School. . Rev. Sanders *afd Honor The Pastor's Aid Club of th( Dunn Chapel Church honored thi Rev. R. L. Sanders recently bi sponsoring a series of services it his behalf. Ministers heard during the weel were Rev. G. L. Elliott, Rev. Davit Elliott, Rev. R. J. Avery, and thi Rev. Clifton Bonce. The minister were accompanied by their choirs. At the close of the service, hi was presented a purse of $127.0( Refreshments were served in th< Fellowship Hall. This is an anniial event sponsor ed by the club prior to the settin of the Annual Conference. Mis Alma Cousur Is president. Rev. Sanders is making ready t attend the Annual Conference which will be held at Sandy Grov and SJ. Matthews Chapel Church es, respectively. Miss Minnie McDonald is secre tary of the Club and Mrs. G. I Elliott is the program leader. Mr. and Mrs. Arche Randal Holmes, Dunn, announce the birt; of a dahgh er. Wanda kay, Nov. I in Betsy Johnson Hospital. Mrs Holmes is the former Mary Eliza beth Pierce Mr. and Mrs. Lenvil Ray Tew Route 2, Bunn. announce the birtl of a son, purwood Ray, Nov. 8 in Betsy Johnson Hospital. Mrs Tew is the former Sara France Myers. Mr. and. Mrs. ie n Michael Mel vin, Elizabethtown, announce ttv A of a. Nov, ,6, »n Bits Johnson Hospita‘1. ffie mother i the former Linda Rose Bryant. JET-AGE TREE HOUSE— A West German architect has come up with this model for a hotel along the lines of an. ultramodern tree house. Designed to be transportable and quickly put together, it could be set up wherever there is a temporary shortage of accommodations for travel' ers. Individual units also could be converted into three-room apartments. ami \ : ■ ' . ■ • . . . . v. •* ’ . i Controversial Novel At Stake WASHINGTON (UPI) _ The Supreme Court agreed today to rule On a Massachusetts court de cision that banned the spicy 18th ,cehtury novel, "Fanny Hill," as obscene. A New York State court has al lowed the sale of the novel which also has been the sublet of law suits in New Jersey and Illinois. By today’s action, the court a greed to hear arguments in the Mas sachusetts case and hand down an opinion later in the term. The state’s supreme Judicial court found the book obscene anl upheld a finding by the Suffolk County superior court making sellers lia ble to a fine and imprisonment. A current movie is based On the book. In other actions today, the Sup reme Court: —Denied a hearing to a group of New York City white parents who protested the pairing of a white and a Negro school in Queens Coun ty. State courts upheld the right of the city Board of Education to ach ieve a more equal racial balanie through reorganization of school attendance zones. —Accepted for decision a Jus tice Department appeal on an un successful antitrust action against the pabst Brewing Co., in acquir ing the Slatz Brewing Co., from Schenley Industries, In*. The court announced that the i Massalhuseits appeal on the “Fan ny Hill‘‘ case would ’be heard a long with one brought by Edward Mishkin, a New York bookseller found guilty of dealing in ohscene books. Arguments in the Mishkin case are set f6r the week of Dec. 6. “Fanny Hill," also known as “John Cleland‘s Memoirs of a Wo man of Pleasure." deals with the experiences of a young English prostitute. Recently, G. P. Putnam's Sons, a New York publishing firm. Jhi (Daily fisuooJvd dunn, N. r Publishing By RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY it* F„ CUMB£*I ST , DUNN, ft. C. KIP UofoE 283"! if. a entered >■ second-class matter In the Poet Office tfe I*' ■mfer the law* of Confi-oss. Ac* of March S, 187*. fwj Afternoon, Monday through FrM»/, Second-class postage paid at Dunn, N 0. •Ct-OF.STATE - $10.5# pel r In advance; fUt months pits tit. 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