Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / Feb. 25, 1964, edition 1 / Page 5
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There is ao study that is^not, capable of delighting us after a lit tle application to it. — Alexander Pope’ t ;; . Keep Tuned To WOXF 'I «tWA»» I IN TUNS I wm* rm* R A • 1 O 1340 On Your Dio I News About People You Know A. R./wijglns is able to be oat after bavinr-.|(|^en in for several days on account '^ sickness. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. predie spent the weekend in Washington as guests of relatives. " Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Plott and son, Rickey, visited relatives in Danville, Va., during the weekena. Mrs. Lawrence Royster, Mrs. Ann Elliott, Mrs. O. T. Parham and Mrs. Joe E. Currln were business visitors to Haw River on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Daniel and Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Critcher left Monday and are spending this week mi a motor tour through Flor ida. , ... "T.... ■ - lit SfgfoK—« Jcb m 8*9lno* md Lom Ameciatlmm [Tran uina ■ THE MORE TIME YOU SPEND WlTX 1 YOUR CHILDREN, THE MORE YOU WILL I LEARN FROM TIME SPENT WITH CHILDREN in wholesome hob bies and chores around the home will merit life’s greatest satisfactions. If your family is not now en joying the benefits of home ownership, we invite you to investigate it with us at Granville Savings and Loan Association. Oscar McFarland of Durham Is *| patient at Duke Hospital. He was stricken seriously ill on Wednesday of the past week. Mrs. Norma Williams attended the spring hair clinic of the North '^grolina1 Cosmetologists Guild held Sigjtlqy in Raleigh/ Mr. ahA Mrs. / Taylor Faucette, and Mr. aflA Mrs. W. J. Henderson of South Boston, Va., left Monday for a week’s'^tay at Daytona Beach, Fla. Whi|p there they at tended the stock dar races. Mrs. Mary. Ann \ Hester assistant home economics i g e n t, spent . Thursday ah<^ Friday at Greenville attending a twining school con ducted at East dfarolina College by the Extension Service.' Patrolman and Mrs. T. Fel ton and children, Pete, B<th and Richard, of Shelby, spent the weekend with Mrs. Felton’s mother?' Mrs. Virginia Perkins, on Goshen St. W. G. Reed and daughter, Mrs. Barbara Jones, spent Monday in Richmond at the bedside of Mr. Reed’s mother, Mrs. Guy Reed, of Lawrenceville, Va., who is critical ly ill at Medical College of Virginia Hospital. | Mrs. C. R. Dickerson returned Friday from Raleigh where she spent several days as the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Jimmy Rackley, and family. She attended a con cert on Wednesday night in which her grandson, Jimmy Carroll Rack ley, participated. i}. '' Misses Lucy Taylor and Betsy Baird, Miss Bessie Morton and Mrs. Sam W. Baird are expected home in the next day or so follow ing a tour of Florida, Charleston, S. C., and a stop over in Wilming ton. They also made a five-day trip to Nassau during their Florida i visit. ; &; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Creech of Norfolk, Va., and Mr. and Mrs. John A. Parham and daughter, Susan, of Durham, visited Mr. and Mrs. Maxie Parham on Sunday. Mr. Creech is engaged in the con struction business in Norfolk and is a cousin of Mr. Parham. John A. Parham is Durham Building In spector. WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIRING Using Factory Materials ! GEO. CIIRRIN JEWELER | CoUega St. » Oxford,- Ni tC. 1 .J We Would Like To Announce a Big ALLIS-CHALMERS OPEN HOUSE Thursday, Feb. 27,1964 •'if - ' V.-. % v ' . f — TWO SESSIONS — From 1:00 to 5:00 P;M. From 7:00 to 9:00 P.M. INTRODUCING NEW EQUIPMENT IN OUR LINE, PLUS TWO NEW TRACTORS 11 DOOR PRIZES EACH SESSION REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED WE WOULD LIKE VERY MUCH FOR YOU TO SEE Mrs. M. O. Talton Sr. is a medi al patient at Granville Hospital. Lt. and Mrs. Nell Yeargln and laughter left Sunday for Biloxi, Miss., where Lt. Yeargin, who :ame home for the weekend, is as ligned to Air Force duty. Mrs. T. F. Edmunds has returned do her home in McKenney, Va., af ,er having spent several days the past week with her daughter, Mis. r. T. Traynham, and family at the Presbyterian Manse. J. R. Frazier of Roanoke, Va., formery of Oxford, is making iteady Improvement following a long period of rest necessitated by i heart malady which he suffered last fall. Mr. Frazier is able to spend up to two hours each day at ;he Leggett Store at Roanoke, which he manages. Jimra^. Farzier, i student at East Carolina College, md Miss Le!ia McFarland of this ;ity spent the weekend with Mr ilfcd^Mrs. Frazier |r* Roanoke. Miss''Piane Cox, who is con. tinuing heKqtudies at a 'Durham business school, fepent the weekend with her parentvMr. and Mrs. H L. Cox. She is ekfly next month beginning part time'duttes with a Durham store as brldkt-consultant md fashion coordinator, f She ha: been in training for this Work foi sometimes. Miss Cox plank to re turn to Oxford for ihe Miss Ox ford Pageant March 7 at wljfch hei successor will be chosen. ’ It Bonnie L. Currin To Give Recital Senior From Oxford to Ap pear at Austin Auditor ium Wednesday Night Bonnie L. Currin of Oxford, a senior at East Carolina College, will be presented ; by the School of Music in a senior voice recital at the college Wednesday at 8:15 p.m. The lyric soprano will sing French, German and American contemporary songs in Austin Auditorium. The public is invited to attend. Miis Currin’s program will open with Bach’s "Seuftaer, Thranen, Kummer, Noth., aria from Cantata No. 21." Three German selections are Schubert’s “Die. jupM Nonne,” “Du bist die Ruh” s&M^^li^'orel Scs by two French composers, : and Delibres, anffalsb^on Jurrin’s recital prbgntm.' > iijpSBP JS$P°tti „Jpera ‘‘The ,”-the«sWoist ^elected Ills We’ve Come.”; --— Singers Heard During ' Lions Club Gathering A program of musical entertain ment, rendered by a double quar tet plus two, was featured at the Thursday night meeting of Oxford Lions Club. The singers, who have m|jde many appearances here, and (ire as an organization un-named, in cluded Bob Clark, Maynard Cten try, B. T- Greene, Talton Hughes Jr., Allen Baker, Dick Murrill, Frank McCullock Jr., JacKldrPitts, Si Puryear and Allen Colenda; The group is under the direction of the Rev. Gary Crow and Mrs. Bill Paynter is their accompanist. Graham Wright arranged the;4>ro gram. ; ' The selections In a varied pro gram of music, among others,"In cluded “This is My Country,” “Walking Matilda," spirituals and college songs. He who sings scarer away his woes.—Cervantes. — ... ..... ,, .' . ] HHk IrW 8 ■ B ^ gg [S M O Mm IkmIp •■?% j ■■ .. " ' Art Museum Curator Heard by Club Group 1 Charles W. Stanford, Curator of Education, North Carolina Museum of. Art, Raleigh, delighted his au dience when he spoke at a tea giv en by the Woman’s Literary Club Tuesday afternoon, February 18, in the Parish House of St. Stephens Episcopal Church. i .Mrs. E. O. Peoples, president of the club, welcomed the guests and introduced her daughter, Mrs. J. C. B. Ehringhaus Jr., executive secre tary of the Museum, who in turn introduced Mr. Stanford. Mr. Stanford spoke of the schools, movements and influences in art as he showed color slides of thirty-three selected pictures of the art treasures in the North Carolina Musuem. He selected pictures from the English, French, Flemish, Dutch, Spanish, German and Ital ian Schools, and ended with a “flash” of the abstact Impression ist. The subjects ranged from pic tures of elegant ladies and gentle ■ men of state and royalty to scenes of a breakfast table, and depicting history, customs and manners against a background of interiors and landscapes. As he lad his au dience in minute observation and pointed out surprising harmonies, brush strokes and lines, everyone was enchanted with color, lights and shades and taken afar from the everyday world into a rarefied atmosphere. Mr. Stanford has the talent of making you communicate j with the artist. Mr. Stanford interspersed his lecture with many interesting facts | about the museum of which every | North Carolinian should be proud, j Although the museum is only seven : years old, it ranks fifteenth in the Uniced Staces. He snowed pictures from the two million dollar gift col lection from tne Kress Foundation, stating that the North Carolina collection was the largest of the Foundation’s Regional gifts. He also told us that 36,000 school chil dren took guided tours of the gal lery in 1«62. 1 Mr. Stanford is a native of Dur ham and a graduate of the Uni versity of North Carolina, and did graduate study at Columbia Uni versity, New York, and Princeton University. He has done extensive research and travel and is the | author of several articles, pamph lets and other writings. Before SPECIAL NOTICE To My Many Friends and Customers in Oxford and Granville County BEGINNING MARCH 1, 1964 WILL OPEN AT 7:00 A.M. and CLOSE AT 7:00 P.M. This Action Is Taken In Order To Comply With the Wage and Hour Laws. The Cooperation of the Public Will Be Greatly Appreciated. Wilson Gulf Service LONNIE L. WILSON, Prop. Williamsboro St. Oxford, N. C. oining the N. C. Musuem, he was >n the curatorial staff at Colonial' Williamsburg, assisting in cata oguing the objects displayed in the restoration buildings. A major part >f his work at the N. C. Museum has been the implementation of a program involving the public schools in which he lectures, pre pare* and sends out information materials and in other ways con tributes to public school art educa tion. —Reported. --4- . ■ -- Disability from heart and blood vessel diseases costs the American ' : ;-— " ., < economy about $9 billion a year, not counting the human and eco nomic loss from death of about one million persons annually from this cause’, says the North Carolina Heart Association. ; .■’Si -j—-——-- - vi;i—_i_—' 4.. ■ :.isi flfl u 1 ■'_S_._■ NOTICE OF SALE The following described property has been seized and confiscated at still sites in Granville County, North Carolina, and the undersigned will offer for sale by public auction, for cash, at the Granville County Court* house door in Oxford, North CaroBiia, on SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1964, AT 12:00 O'CLOCK NOON all of said property which, is particularly listed and described as follows: .'.-A.' -‘f ^ 100 Feet of 2 fitch Plastic Hose 15 No. 3 Galvanize* Tubs 2 Farm Shovels ^ 2 Concrete Mixing Hoes 1 Garden Hoe 1 Pitch-Fork 1 Mattock 1 Lantern (Kerosene) 1 Pump (Briggs and Stratton Motor Homart Pump Sold by Sears and Raepick) , 1 Hand Water Pump (2 Inch Inlet and Outlet). >.. ■ : This the 13th day of February, 1964. GRANVILLE COUNTY BOARD OF ALCOHOLIC CONTROL By Garland F. Mayes, Chairmaflf, :"i'l Pall Kail travels pleasure to yoir/ ' .. I > ‘ ” •. ’ * .J- •... . ••. • , * - . • .. ,w,» v i-i'J-.iw?', . ■ . , rTOsHKKSSSMHHBMSHBBiHsl PALL MALL’s natural mildness is so friendly to your taste I See for yourself! PALL MALL’s famous length travels the smoke naturally—over, under, around and through the finest tobaccos money can buy. Makes it mild but does not filter out that satisfying flavor, so friendly to your taste. Buy PALL MALL Famous Cigarettes. Outstanding —and they are Mild! 1 I
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 25, 1964, edition 1
5
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