Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Jan. 6, 1949, edition 1 / Page 7
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: ^Sf^DAY, JANUARY «, 1#49, THI£ NEWSaOUBNAL OUEWHIFFLE NEWS by Mrs. Ralph Cotiiran •••■•• " _ r.' • • ■ ^Bss Annie Moscatello of Man- M’: hafteu' arrived' Tuesday night to be ja^guest of Miss EUen Booth. , -!;Mrs. Leon Allred resigned from I ^ .V;’ Sanatorium School of'Nursing ! td take iq) her residence in Abex dean. ■ : • lj|;g^|;^'‘''i^iClarence Cox, formerly of Mc- Cyn^ visited friends at N. C. San- • L*. Jr-. ' • “ atorium last week-end. 'i’- v •■■- ■ ■ Yol fradiig Cars? BEARDLESS OF WHERE 'OR WHEN — LET TO FINANCE IT FOR YOU. Lmaber Rhrer PiseoantCo. I Phone 767 Sontib Efan Si LUMBERTON. N. C Mrs. Claude Legg was called to Morganton on account of the ill ness of her mother-in-law. She will be gone an indefinite length of time. • Eugene Hatos is in New York visiting his mother, Mrs. Mary Hatos, who is ill. Mi^ Annie Thorne and Miss Annie Moore received word that they have passed their State i^ard Examinations.' Mrs. Kay Kea Boyce has re?' signed from the Sanatorium staff to care for her mother, Mrs. Kea of Goldsboro. 'Dr. Harold Gentry of Durham joined the medical staff of N. C. Sanatorium Tuesday. Dr. Gentry was employed at one time in the laboratory at the Sanatorium. Miss Ruby Luck of Winston- Salem visited friends at McCain last week-end. Miss Grady Louise Covington, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Covington, left last week to re sume her duties at Rex hospital in Raleigh. Jack Gibson of Montgomery, Ala. visited Miss Belle Whj^ and other friends at N. C. Sanatorium last Wigek. Mr, Gibscm was former ly editor of the Sanatorium Sun and the News Joiumal. G. W. Winecoff has been ill at his home in Montrose. Miss Harriet Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones of Mc- Caih, visited friends in Washington D. C. last week. Miss Jones re turned last Sunday. Miss Carrie Toomer is visiting relatives & Wilmington this week. She will return Tuesday. Floyd Lucas has accepted a po sition as night' watchman at Mc Cain. Mrs. Harold Thomas Riverton started Monday as a member of the N. C. Sanatordim Record Room staff. Dr. Meredith Johnson returned last Sunday from a two weeks vacation spent with his parents, Rev. nd Mrs. Elbert Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Overby of Char lotte and Mrs. Johnson accompan ied Dr. Johnson to Charlotte. Mrs. W. F. Tinder visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Hardester of Raleigh, last week. PENDER LEADS WITH jOWER meat prices COMPARE TODAYS MEAT PRICES WITH MEAT ' PRICES OF THREE MONTHSrAPP ITEMS SEPTi 21,1948 ^loDAY SMOKED PICNICS lii.39c CHUCK ROAST lb 77c Ib.47c • ■ / PORK CHOPS'^ lb 95 c lb;61c PORK ROAST.." lb 71c lb.41c FRESH PICNICS lb 59c lb.41c Sunshine Hi Ho Crackers, 1-lb pkg 30c Step Into Our Garden Stronghaart Dog Food, 2 cans 21c Red Virgiijia Waxed Paper WINESAP APPLES Cut-Rite, roll 25c 2 lbs. 25c Southern Gold Margarine, 1-lb qtrs 48c California Iceberg Octagon FIRM LETTUCE . 2heads 25c Cleanser, 3 cans 20c Large Tender Green Beauty Soap Palmolive, reg cake 10c PASCAL CELERY 2 Stks 29c Miss Carlotta Riehiodson of Eagle Springs has returned to the Sdiool of-Nursing at McCain. Miss Richardson Was injured in an ac cident some months ago. Ralph Borlett visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Barlett in Black Mountain last Friday nd Saturday. 'Dr. W. M. Pedc was called to Detroit last week on account of the illness of his mother, Mrs. Robert Peck. W. F, Tinder spent Christmas with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Tinder at Charlottesville. Va. Mr. and Mrs. D. N. Jones and family visited in Merry Oaks Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Sinclair, Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Huff, Jr. of Ra^ lei^. returned Saturday night from a week’s trip to Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Calloway and children of Hamlet visited Mr. aiMl Mrs. N. F. Sinclair Sunday. Bill Moses of Wake Forest spent last week at home. Mr. and Mrs. Frazier Hare of Sanford visited Mr. Hare’s parents Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. David. Bobbitt have returned after honeymocmmg in Florida. They have an apart ment in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Talmadge Bobbitt. Miss Josephine McLauchlin of Burlington spent several days last week here in the home of her mother, Mrs. H. C. McLauchlin. Mr. and Mrs,' Floyd Price and daughter of Raleigh spent the wedc-end here with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Cothi^n took them back to Raleigh Sui^y. n Mr. and Mrs. J. J. J^ttman of Hamlet came here Sunday to at tend the Hare-Mclnnis wedding. Watching the new year in at the •home of Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Peck were Dr. Lyan Johnson, Miss Helen Brown, Miss Florence Side's. Dr. T. T. Wu, Dr. M. Chen and Dr. Sun. Refreshments were served and bridge was played. Mrs. A. C. Belvin returned Mon day from a visit with her daughter, Mrs. M. G. Phillips, at Salisbury, Md. Mrs. Belvin'has been in Mary land since Thanksgiving. Guion Eubanks has accepted a position with the Bureau of Stan dards in Washington, D. C. He will leave for Washingtos dbout the middle of January . Dr. Sanky L. Blanton, dean of Wake Forest, was dinner guest of Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Byrd Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John R. Rankin of Gastonia visited last week-end in the home of their daughter. Mrs. J. S. Hiatt. lOCVBiifliel Corn Club Sedct New Members E. Ray Pickier l^t for a check up at Moore County hospital last Friday. Dinner guests of Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Byrd Monday were Mrs. Marvin Ellis and Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Sea- grove and son. Tommy, all of near Durham. Mrs. Ellis is a si^er of Dr. Byrd. Dr. and Mrs. Dennis W. Biggs, Jr. arrived Monday from Bowman- Gray Medical School. Dr. Biggs will spend six mon^s at the San atorium. Tobacco growers with disease- infested soils need to give careful attention to choosing the right va rieties, says research workers at the North Ca^lina Experiment Station. * “Are you a member of the North Carolina 100-Bushel Com Club? If not, look up one of your neigh bors who is a member, and get him to sponsor you for membership in 1949.” That’s the advice given to Tar Heel farmers this week by Dr. E. R. Collins, in charge of agronomy extension at State College. Every adult farmer, 4-H Club or FPA mem'ber who belongs to the 100-Bushel Club will be asked to sponsor another person for membership this year. Dr. Collins said. As a reward, each sponsor will receive an allocation of ni trogen topdressing suHicient to take care of his own com crop and that of the person he is sponsoring. The two growers will be expect ed to confer frequently concerning the choice of hybrid seed, spacing, cultivating and fertilizing prac tices which will result in the highest yields. Members who decide to occept the sponsoring offer should notify their county agent. In counties where orders are large enough to j-ustify it, cooperating fertilizer distributors will ship the topdress ing material in carlood lots. Farm- 'ers will be required to accept de livery as ^n as the material ar rives in January, Februry, or March. The lOO-Bushel Club, started in 1945 for the purpose of encourag ing the use of hybrid varieties and better prodction practices, reached a membership of 638 in 1937. The total may exceed 1,5{M) when all reports have been received for 1948. The club is considered one of the major factors responsible for raising the State’s average com yield from 23 bushels per acre in 1945 to an estimated 33 bushels per acre in 1948. Slate CoO^e HmbToFanB HiHiieiiiakm ' Statistics show your botne is m ‘ greater danger during winter nxmths than at any other time ck the year. This is when furnaces, heaters and electric apparatus are put into intensive operathm. Home owners should inspect their houses to protect tbemclves against winter fire hazards. The logical place to start a home inflection is tiie basement becaioe iVs a major source of fizcsL Chimneys, fhies and smotepipes may have collected excessive soot after the unusually cold weadier of last year. Have them cleaned out. Check the housekeeping of die basement. Remove all rubbish, clothes, papers that may have ac cumulated. Have an electrician look over the wiring in aU ports of the house, tt it has frayed, have it re paired, or replaced. Don’t use too many appliances on one circuit. If you’re planning to add any nevir appliances, such as a deep-fre^e unit cht other high-powered unit, ask an expert electrician if the wiring'can sup port the additional load. Inspect the kitchen stove for grease and soot. See that all ashes are put in metal containers. Get out or provide a metal screen for the fireplace. Be sure ■that there are enough ashtrays about the house. In case of fire, get everyone out of the house. 0 Production of flue-cxired tobacco in the State in 1948 totaled 746,- 300,000 pounds, 17.8 per cent be low 1947 but 14 per cent above the 1937-46 average. Pride of VALDOSTA Green Beans 2 No. 2 cans 31c Redgate Mixed Sweet Peas , 3 no 2 cans 23c Instant Suds New Vel, Ige pkg .... 30c Soap Flakes Octagon, pkg 33c Floods of Suds Super Suds, Ige pkg 33c Laundry Bleadh Clorox, qt bot .... Laundry Soap Octogan, cake . Bouquet Soap Cachmere .... 2 cakes 23c ..19c 9c' Lucy Lockette ^ / ORANGE JUICE, 2 46-oz cans^ 39c I Ideal For Salads CHUM SALMON, no-1 can 59c I Phillip’s White And ^ GREEN LIMAS, no-1 can 21c » * Red Ripe ^ TOMATOES, no-2 can 15c | Rich-Full Bodied Coffee GOLD LABEL, 1-lb pkg 47c „ Del Monte Large ^ EVAP. PRUNES, 2-lb pkg 41c * ft PENDER W HEN you see the 1949 Chevrolets, a glance will be enough to tell you they're new—all new—in line and contour, in beauty and style. And when you look inside, and under the hood, and beneath the chassis, you'll see that their newness is not merely in outward appearance, but in design and engineering and construction as well. \ But, to a lot of people, the 1949 Chevro let is already old. They know what it will do, and how exceedingly well it will do it— they know all about its performance, its camfort, its power, safety, durability and Monomy. They are the engineers and tech nicians of the General Motors Proving Ground—the largest, most completely equipped, outdoor testing laboratory in the automobile world. Here, before a single new 1949 Chevro- let went into production, experimental models were tested—made to show that they possess, in greater measure than ever, all those qualities on which Chevrolet has built its leadership. In short, the General Motors Proving Ground tests are your assurance that your new-model Chevrolet has proved its worth through many months and many, many thousands of miles of rough handling. Soon you will see the new Chevrolet— and when you do, you will see a car not only new, but tried and true. ^ If*' ili • HOKE ALTO COMPANY Phone 2301 Raeford, N. C.
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 6, 1949, edition 1
7
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