Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / March 15, 1956, edition 1 / Page 13
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1 PAGE THIRTEEN V" r IT f v . ft 0 ; .'3 O ,,,,.. :''3:if ju? MONDAY ON CONfcERT TOU I COOES; : rposTiiY cost: ... r A- -AAJJMAILWAMU 1 Contribute If KniTh OGADRMCk BR8KINK9 TO RACHEL FIELD q '.'' " 8o fr M I .know, there lias nev er enft spring Thanksgiving. That'll oy proclamation of the Pres 'ant,' like the one in November. But t the same last week was Thanks ing week to me. Why? Because hese things, and many more. The 'e buds, the green of the weep yilkw tlv88! the songs of bird, ree little pansy blossoms, the 'on Thursday that came down a promise of "it won't last." It t. . The pleasure of feeling well, jbefag able to ride the full route, being sick the week before. And last, but by no means least friends, old and new. Every week, it seems someone, for the first time, who is so kind and friendly, that I drive away feeling I have known them all my life. Just to mention a few, there is Mrs. Milbura Gosnell, who lives on Little Laurel. She had nd ready to give me for the library. a new stop at her home on Paint Fork.' I had noc nw . meeting her up to now. She was so cordial and pleasant to me. I could go on an on. From the bottom of my heart, I want to say, "thank you" to each and every one of you, who makes this the best job that I ever have had or ever could hope to have. New stops are being adlded on every trip. 'On my April "go round" I shall be stopping at Miss Gayk Iaensee'8 mail box on Little Laurel and at Mrs. Delbert Shelton's on Sheltojn Laurel. She is another one of my new friends. On March 2u, there will be stops at the Dairy Bar about 1:30 and at S. C. Briggs' 1 Mill about 2:00. These are both on Highway 19-23. The bookmobile schedule is chang ing gradually. Today, Monday, am working in the Library in Mar aha)),;Mit Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, I will be out on the route. That will make a third week. Up to now I have been out only two-out-of every four. Soon there will be a (All This and Heaven Too) A wise-eyed little girl cracked but ternuts Upon a gravestone near a sheltering tree. Few words were on the stone but as its crown Was carved the flower of France, a fleur de lis. She dropped a four-leaf clover on the grave And traced the outline of the fragile flower. In years to come she told a wondrous tale But not today the magic of that hour. ELIZABETH FIELD Asheville, N. C. N. Carolina Resident Received $2.2 Million From Mutual In 1955 North Carolina residents received $2,268,990 in benefit payments dur ing 1955 from Mutual of New York. More than 50 percent of the total were "livine benefits" paid to poli cyholders themselves in the form of dividends, endowments, annuities, in come payments, disability benefits and other payments. xiri C. rroiiitt, of Asheviue, as sistant manager of the company's Charlotte agency, reported that rest dents of the state owned 22,700 JlU AY policies at year-end, represent ing 81.2 mi'iion of insurance pro tection. The company has over ?2.b million invested here. fourth week. Pn wb anv "that's all. we rwf., ' J want to express our appreciation to rh News-Record for taking in mag .izines for us, and also to the folks ho leave them. .At iy.-- - r t si ( ) Gerfcest protection cscbst VILDnE end BLUE MOLD with i- am n 1M II V X When wildfire threatens your seed beds, you can get better results with Agm-8ibep than with standard copper or - 1 - i BordMttxsixay&Axaa- Sisxp is also highly ef mold when accompany- . mg wmnre, xim,.sxis m wfl pay you to use Acw-Srsxr: obe afitotfc that wildflw W tads tad Wok mold 'Amg' 9, Afirf-Slr used si directed, is non-tosic and V; doe not corrode or dog sprayers. ' 4T ACrf-Sr is reccttmended by many State Agricultural Eiperiment Btaooos. - . nin(rwtolxx)rt vxurpn)XlMWlulowllJ- ' tol 7 zzi-Ctztt, Exte?sive corrrmerdal testa ' 1 ' r Xltsd screera, they I -1- j a l?j;ir cop cf better kaf izt tli . C.s in today and grt yocr r.Tly. " i fca bottles UAH ounoal and ta 2$- kac,hr v v , v. .'r- , mim..mrk . ni ft i MARS HILL The Mars Hill College Choir will leave Sunday on a week-long concert tour through North Carolina and into Virginia. The 39-voice choral group, directed by Kufus Norris and accompanied by Mias Pearl Francis, wil sing in 10 cities in North Carolina from Hickory to Kinston and in South Hill, Va. , Tommy Edwards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clay Edwards of Mars Hill, is the only Madison County stu dent in the choir, but other students from this area in clude Mary Carolyn Grant, Mary Elizabeth Farmer of Asheville; Sylvia Hunt of Swannanoa, and Ka, Brown and Hannah England of Weaverville. it triur bv d resenting a pro- X 11C tUVU v Ala wfv" - - - v " . gram of sacred music at the morning worship seryic of the First Baptist Church of Hickory Sunday. Thai evening the group will present a similar service at the Ranlo Baptist Church in Gastonia. Sunday morning, March 19. the choir will jour ney to Albemarle, where it will give a cdncert in the high school. Monday night the choir will sing at the First Baptist Church in Rockingham. Tuesday performances will be given at Fayette ville Hiirh School and at the Forest Hills Baptist Church in Raleigh. Wednesday the choir will sing at Grainger High School in Kinston and at the First Baptist Church in Goldsboro. The following day, Thursday, the choir will give concerts at the high school in Henderson and at the First Baptist Church in South Hill, Va. The tour will be completed Friday, March 23, with a conceit at Burlington High School in Burling ton. , , The choir members and faculty personnel accom panying the group should arrive back on the campus Saturday, March 24, just in time to pack up and leave :or the spring holidays at Mars Hill, which will begin after classes are over on March 23. D.ciaaa moimmr nf trip rhnir is Robert Chap- UUOIUVOO lllllllf,v. - - - - -w man of Mars Hill, a member of the faculty of the busi ness department and assistant registrar, tie arranged the itinerary and will accompany the choir on the tour. The group will travel by chartered bus and will spenu the nights in Gastonia, Rockingham, Raleigh Goldsboro and South Hill, Va. . The trip is annually undertaken by the choir, ast year t..e choir toured through South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, The trip this year was arranged for performances throughout North Carolina as a com- plement to tne centennial ceieorsumi u mnsc. -Ai tiy-'S Ajr t Sin" i k Is t i . !i;:;sil?li iliilliSflfli . : ;?:-WMswiWiiwv.v,iuijino.i.-.vS '56 B0DGE CoK)t ills your King Sizo Buy ! Luwrious new '56 DODGE CORONET is bigger by far than other medium-priced cars! Bigger in size, comfort, performance, style! Yet it k orlced riaitt down with the lowestiwieedawk A big-Erodge Coronet V-8t Lancer hardtop costs only -&tii?mi!& hardtopBJ, m the smaM-caf field! , mUhum prk fi4 tfcow prH w C"r Whttsriwhst stC ttijisRSssjiw limits Si iadMtbatw 4" CerT , MysgJMwIieair WD" Mfifc"lr' ' ' Ttf costs h $.1 1 " iiiiiii iiiitiiiii ''ajsWl (less MiM f Scents wMkQ ' Mi. hwtmin-4F irt' 1 1 -f Wtosslllefcr , a,S4D ' ZZTm rfMnf Cf if --t X Car" M T ' - " TT. ..j -J i.1 a4 Umim ktLi4t v wV i h t'-Mrt "'' Cewmay print wn eawl rewri breefclm n iwml At a touch of your finfer, you feODfflud the grtaffM vajonf ing tar on Cm rwtl (ooay ' bar mtL-J The new '63 Oode shat-. teni every recrl ia tie book ' ' by ' f ' inif U . . tt V-i Um V "fc-t tariff .r r-iisslatalLtops.-tirtrtairif- a. J" -1 'f 1 J : . j i , v. -
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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March 15, 1956, edition 1
13
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