Newspapers / The news-journal. / March 29, 1945, edition 1 / Page 5
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THURSDAY, MARCH 29th, 1945 THE NEWS-JOURNAL, RAEFORD. N. C PAGE F.IVE THE RAEFORD THEATRE PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MARCH 2!, 19 IS Is-Pei i. iocia rsonai items BOOK-BRIDGE CLUB ENTERTAINED Mrs. Neill McFadyen was hostess to the Book-Bririeje cli'b in her a pariment dt the Pines last Thursday afternoon. In the game ot bridge, Mrs. Chandler Roberts made high fcore and Mrs. Paul Dickson second tiigh. Defense stamps were prizes. Mrs. Clyde Upchurch, Mrs. Chand ler Roberts, and Mrs. Arch Graham were guests other than club mmb'T playing bridge. Mrs. J. W. Mc-Cauchlin and Mrs. Payne Brown of Charleston, West Va., joined the party for refreshments. GARDENS OPEN Anyone who would like may, on Sunday afternoon, view Mrs. H. A. Cameron's gardens, as they will be open to the public at this time. 0 BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS Born to Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Ham mon on Sunday, March 18. a son, Cal vin Coolidge Hammond, Jr. MRS. JOHNSON GIVES DINNER FOR FIREMEN The members of the Raeford Fire department were guests of Mrs. Ju ! nn Johnson at supper on last Friday eve..! g. A delicious supper, with soagnt.'.-.; as the main dish and with :-. variety of accessories, was served -.j thirty-five members and special !.' jests. During the evening bingo was play- cd and a nu i ber of "interesting" prizes were awarded, topped by a plug e'ehewin's won by the chief of '.he department Harry Greene. Cl::1 Ddw, Joe Gulledge and June Johnson were guests other than members of the department. Miss Myrtle McCall, Mrs. Clyde Upchurch, Mr;. M. Baum?artner, Miss Louise Fletcher, Margaret McKenzie and Agnes Mae Johnson, assisted the hos t's in serving. O CALL FOR KIT BAGS The Red Cross urges all who have kit bags to make get them in at '"".re as they are much needed. KATE SMITH asked to write this message on Saving Used Fats! "The help of every woman ia needed in saving vaed lata for hundreds of battlefield and home front essential: But some of us don't know all the ways we can do it. Here are a few points I've found helpful." Kate Smith rfrnYflfflflfififrrilfl MANY WOMEN SAYj "But I never have fats left over." Certainly it's good economy to re-use your fats . . . but there's always tome left over even after that. ..and that little is more important than you can imagine. Only one tablespoonful of used fat will help make S machine-gun bullets. So there just can't ever be too little to save! Come on, everybody, scrape your broiling pan, your roaster, skillet. Save meat trimmings and scraps of fat left on plates. OTHERS TELL ME: "But my fats are often too dark to turn in." It doesn't make a mite of difference how dark or blr.ckened ...or what smelly things like onion or fish you've cooked in your fat. Every drop of it will help make parachutes, synthetic rubber, soaps for the fighting and war fronts. Don't feel ashamed to hand it in to your butcher. If you save every bit of fat you possibly can, you're doing a job to be proud ofl r2 I i5 XVi Ea .0llrLhamir A3 Y"s & I THEN YOU HEAR: "But what sort of container will J use?" Any kind of tin can will do. The next time you open a can of fruit or juice or soup or vegetables, save it. But please don't use jj!..ss ...it almost always breaks nd makes the fdt difT.cult to ? A .; . When the can is full, take it to your butcher. For every i ;..ni!, you'll get 2 red points. If yqu have any difficulty cii.j ir i f fats, call your Home Demonstration or Ciuuty Aoit. Approtrdby TFA and OP A. PiJ jr by biuwlry P. A. WILSON IS SPEAKER AT EDUCATIONAL DEPT. The Educational Department of the Raeford Woman's Club held its March meeting Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 at the home of Mrs. Robert Gatlin, with Mrs. G. W. Brown and Mrs. Thomas Cameron as co-hostesses. Mrs. Tommie Upchurch, chairman, introduced P. A. Wilson who ad dressed the members on the "Dum barton Oaks Peace Proposals." Mr. Wilson prefaced his talk with a few interesting facts concerning the history of the Dumbarton Oaks buil ding. He said 1,131 the Dumbarton Oaks Proposal, agreed to by repre sentatives of the 'Big Four,' are ten tative recommendations which form a sound basis for international or ganization to maintain peace. He also outlined the functions of the differ ent departments of the proposal. Mr. Wilson concluded his I address hy urging the club women to exert every effort to develop a public opinion in favor of a uniffied international action to prevent war. Mrs. H. L. Gatlin. Jr., reviewed "Anna and King Siam," by Margaret Landon. Mrs. J. W. Currie reviewed "Yankee Stranger," one of historical novels of Elswyth Thane. Attractive flower arrangements of early spring flowers were used in Mrs. Gatlin's living anid dining rooms. At the conclusion of the program the hostesses served a delectable fro zen salad, dainty sandwiches and coffee. , 0 GARDEN CLUB MEMBERS HAVE PLANT EXCHANGE An enthusiastic group of Raeford gardeners met at the home of Mrs. H. A. Cameron Friday afternoon and exchanged flower plants. It was really surprising to see the quantity and variety of flower plants that were contributed. Everyone went home with some new plants for her garden and with many new worth-while ideas. A regular meet ing of the garden club was held yesterday at the home of Mrs. W. T. Covington. O Born to Mr. and Mrs. James Ed ward, Sunday, March 18, a daugh ter, Stella Barbara Ann. ? - . ft - !t V ' I MAY QUEEN Miss Mary Johnson, I who has been chosen as May Queen .is snmvn aoove. .viiss jonnson, aaugn- I In. f HA 1 , T T I T 1 ici ui .vii. uuu zvjia. Lt n. jonnson of Kenlyt is a piano and public school music major, and will receive her degree in May of this year. more Municipal stadium. Miss Ina Mae Benner spent the past week end in Southern Pines visiting friends. Miss Elsie Upchurch, freshman at Brenau college, Ga., and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Upchurch of Rae ford, was initiated into Alpha Gamma Delta, national social sorority, recently. Sgt. and Mrs. James H. Irby an nounce the birth of a daughter. Mar tha Ann. on March 23, at Station hospital, Fort Bragg. Mrs. Irby was the former Miss Dorothy Currie. Mrs. Bob Foreman left by plane from the Raleigh airport Monday for San Francisco, where she will join her' husband Lt. (jg) Foreman. Mrs Bob Conk and Mrs. J. B. Thomas took her to Raleigh. Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Currie of Rae ford and Mrs. Ed Bethune of Hamlet spent the past week-end in Winston Salem with Mrs. Malcolm McLean. Mrs. Allan McGee and sons will spend Easter holiuays with Mrs. R. B. Lewis. Mrs. Frank Williams, who is mak ing her home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Blue while Capt. Williams is overseas, has accepted a position in the Red Cross office at Fort Bragg. Mrs. Hugh Lowe returned-to Char lotte Saturday morning after hav ing spent several days last week with Mr. and Mrs. D. Scott Poole. Mr. and Mrs. Randle Matheson and sons stopped in Raeford for a few clays, enrnute from their winter home in Stuart, Fla., to their home in Robbinsville, N. J. Mrs. Arthur Matheson and daugh ter, Alice Sutton and Mrs. L. B. Sut ton returend from Asheville Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Poovey visited the gardens around Charleston, S. C, the past week end. Mrs. Poovey says they are more beautiful than she has ever seen them. Mrs. Sam Parnell returned last Friday fro.n a visit of several weeks in Washington, D. C. Mrs. Lawrence Poole spent the past week end in Raleigh as the guest of Miss Victoria Mial. Miss Mial was formerly a member of the Raeford school faculty. Milton Mann came home from a Fayetteville hospital last week. He is recovering from an appendec tomy. Chandler Roberts of Raleigh, spent the week end with his family in Raeford. Mrs. G. B. Rowland returned from Thirhnm Thursday. Her sister, who has been very ill is some better. Mrs. Inn S. McLend an ! daugh- 'or, J;me Cuivie, of Baltimore, spent he week end with hone folks. Mrs. C. .1. Sen ford returned to Baltimore with them, going esnecially to seo her granddaughter, Jane Currie. in '.he Sunrise Easter pageant at Balti- Major James K. David of Sioux City, Iowa, arrived Sunday to join his wife for a visit here and in South Carolina with relatives. Mrs. Wal ter David, of Salters, S. C, is a guest this week of Mrs. J. K. David's pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. H. S. McLean. Mrs. Herbert McKeithan spent Monday and Tuesday in Greensboro with Mr. McKeithan. She went es pecially to attend the funeral ser vices for R. L. Clay, who was an associate of Mr. McKeithan in the office of the Internal Revenue de partment there. THURSDAY & FRIDAY "The Thin Man Goes Honte" Myrna Loy and William Powell SATURDAY "The Man From Rio Grande" Don "Red" Barry And "Goodnight Sweetheart" Robert Livingston and Ruth Terry SUNDAY "Crime By Night" Jane Wyman and Jerome Cowan MONDAY & TUESDAY "Kismet" Marlene Dietrich and Ronald Coleman WEDNESDAY "Secrets of Scotland Yard" C. Aubrey Smith and Lionel Atwill THURSDAY AND FRIDAY "Winged Victory" Pvt. Lon McCallister Jeanne Craig Jane Ball The children of Mr. and. Mrs. Raymond McLean are quite sick with mumps. Mis. W. L. Alexander had the mis fortune Monday to fall in an irriga tion ditch which runs through their garden. She sprained a wrist and an ankle. Mr. Alexander says she says she was chasing a dog. Mrs. Carl Freeman spent the past week end in Florence, S. C, visiting relatives. Mrs. J. A. Bostic, who is making her home at present with her sister, Mrs. Margery Campbell Townsend, is visiting her husband's people in Laurinburg this week. Her father-in-law is quite sick and is in the hospital. fContinued on Page Fcur) Coughs h mil- ii n due to colds are eased, sticky phlegm loosened up, irritated upper breathing passages are foothed and relieved, by rubbing Vicks VapoKuo on throat, chest and back at bedtime. Blessed relief as VapoRub PENETRATES to upper bronchial tubes with its special medicinal vapors, STIMULATES chest and tack sur faces like a warming poultice. Often by morning most of the mis ery of the cold is gone! Remember ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this spe- cial double action. It's time-tested, home-proved . . . the best-known home remedy for reliev- A mm fmt S0 ing miseries of f I V 9 children's colds. V VAPOROB RED SPRINGS THEATRE PROGRAMME FOR WEEK BEGINNING MARCH 29, 1945 THURSDAY-FRIDAY Matinees at 3:30 Daily NIGHT SHOWS 7:30 & 9:30 "Thunderhead" Preston Foster Rita Johnson Roddy McDowall SATURDAY 1:30 'til 10:30 P. M. "The Sheriff of Cimmaron" Sunset Carson LATE SHOW SATURDAY 10:30 P. M. "Circumstantial Evidence" MONDAY-TUESDAY Matinees at 3:30 Daily "Together Again" Irene Dunne and Charles Bover WEDNESDAY Matinee 3:30 "Keeper of the Flame" Spencer Tracy and Kathcrine Hepburn THURSDAY "Ministry of Fear" Ray Millund and Marjory Reynolds FRIDAY "Guest in the House" Anne Baxter and Ralph Bellamy Let's raid the icebox . . . Have a Coca-Cola ...a way to make a party an added success Have 0 Coke are words that make the I iichen the center of attraction for the ceen-age set. For Coca-Cola never loses the freshness of its appeal, nor its unfailing refreshment. No wonder Cca-Cola stands for the pause thut rcjrahet from Maine to California, has become a symbol of happy, refreshing times together everywhere. SOIIIED UNDER AUtHOIILIY Of IHt CCCA COIA COMPANY IT COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Aberdeen, N. C. 9 - . t i mm m 1 i rte r ,- : its Ir-rn. y swtnuii' ik! of 1 1 Cut.m-t.vU IvMany
March 29, 1945, edition 1
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