Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / May 12, 1949, edition 1 / Page 4
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i "ii^F013k THE NEWS^OUBNAL THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1949 f The News-Journal Published Every Thursday at Baeford, N. C.- Subscription Rates... „.......$2.0« per year in advance PAUL DICKSON Editor and Ptdllidmr Entered as second-class mail mattor at ^ 'tiie pbat . . A ‘ .'‘j office at Raeford, N. C., under the Act of Much,3^ .1870. Com War Trophy Goes On Display North Carolinians had their first chance last week to see the challenge trophy which is at stake in the “corn war” between the Old North State and Virginia. A window display featuring the trophj' and pictures of Governors Scott and Tuck was placed on ex hibit in Raleigh Wednesday morn ing. This week it is being shown in Troy, Montgomery County. Ffa^k Daniels of Raleigh, chair man of Governor Scott’s com con test publicity committee, said the display'will be exhibited in Ashe- bbro, Randolph County, during the week of May 16; in Marion, McDo\’i;ell County, the. week of .May 23; and at fetrtilizer dealers’ m.eetings in .\sheville, Asheboro. Fayetteville, Tarboro, and Eliz abeth City during the week of May 30. The display was prepared by the National Fertilizer Associa tion which is donating the 30- inch-high trophy to the winning State. The exhibit includes the challenge by Governor Tuck, the acceptance by . Governor Scott, and pointers on “what it takes to win” and “what it means to win.” South. Apparently, Mr. Clhafham is much in favor of the :-Hart- PERSONALS Mr. and- Mrs. Kermit Wood are moving back into flieir own hoihe, which was damaged by fire sev eral months ago. The repairs on the home have just been com pleted. Dr. and Mrs. Howard Baucom' and daugbtefr of Goldsboro were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Baucom.. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lee are leaving today for White Lake to spend the summer months. Mr. Lee -will be manager of the cafe at Lee’s Beach. William and Robert Covington of Charlotte .j^ent Sunday jn Raeford with Mrs. W. T. Cov* ington. Louis Parker has been a pat ient at Highsmith hospital since Sunday night- Mr. and Mrs. George Weaver and son, George, Jr. of Albemarle spent the* week end here with Mrs. Jennie Weaver. ' , MORE ABOUT Tar Heel ley Act Although he dobs tbinlr some admendment^ tp it are nec essary. “We have had more labor peace since Taft-Hartley than siiice 1926,” he said. From all indications the Con gressman thinks wages to be pret ty well .adjusted in the South. This problem, he should be well acquainted with (^both from the standpoint of the employer and the employee) since he is the manufacturer of the well-known “Chatharir” blankets. He revealed that he expects to vote’ for a ■‘medium-” wage. The present minimum wage is 40 cents per hour. So, it is assumed that he regards a medium wage as about ■ 50 or 60 cents an. hour. He' fol lowed his viewpoint on labor with the quotation from Lincoln; “You can’t h/.lp the wage earn er by pulling down the wage payer.” The speech of Mr. Chatham was quite effective in stirring-up the rebel spirit in the Southerners. Concluding with a punch that brought a roimd of ^pplause from the audience, he said: “The South should stand up, get up on its hind legs, and fight it out!” - BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mrs. Paul Dickson, Jr. and little dau^ter, Anne, spent Sat- urd^vs^ night and Sunday with Mrs. C. L. Black in Greensboro. Mrs. Zula Creel of Boston, Mass, is spending this week here witli her sistfer, Mrs. Harvey Cole. Mr. and Mrs. I. Mann and fam ily spent the week end at Wil mington and Wrightfiii^jjto'Beach. Mrs. Mary McBfyd6“ visfted‘*)F. and Mrs. K. B. Grim at Liberty and Mrs.' E. C. ^mith, Jr. and new son, at the Rdhdolph Coun ty hospital in Asheboro, Sunday. Mrs. Grim and Mrs. Smith are daughters of Mrs. McBryde. Miss Sarah' Lytch of Salem college spent Mother’s Day with her parenb, hSxi smd Mrs. Clar ence-Lytch. V . , . Howard Falls of Gastonia, yrho was recently, dismissed from Vet eran’s hospital at ,Oteen, visited his sister, Mirs. Clyde Upchurch, Jr., the past wei^. He left yester day for the Naval Air base at Patuxet, Md., .where he will visit Lt. and Mrs. Malcolm Colleen. Mrs, Collin is also a sister of Mr. Fails. Mrs. Alfred Cole and her sis ter, Mrs. Nettfe Davis and two friends, Mrs. Beulah Pruitt and Miss Jessie Mitchell of Fairmont, left yesterday by motor for a trip up the Atlantic Seaboard going to Hartford, Conn,-There they will visit Miss Betsy Asn Cole. They will be gone for about a week, pne member of the party, Mrs. Pruitt, is only going as far as Baltimore. ' ' • Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gammon and family of Burlington were week end guests of Mrs.’ Gammon’s parents, and Mrs. W. L..Mc- Fadyen. R. B. Lewis returned -to Raeford Tuesday morning after spending the week end in Atlanta, Georgia, with his mother. M^-'and Mrs. Martin Webb had as their week end guests, .Mr. and Mrs. Bob Webb of Pioetops. Mr. and ^s. W. -T. McLean visited^^^.r and Mrs. John Cal McLemi Monday en route to their home in Clinton from Winston- Salem. William Poole was at home from the Citadel toe past- week end. He came especially to go to Ft. Bragg with the local National Guard. Mrs. Lucy Smith returned Mon day after spending the week end in Raleigh with her daughters. Misses Elaine and AUyne Smith/ Mr. aiid Mrs. Lewis Upchurch, Mary Sue and Louis, Jr., went to Thomasville', Ga. last week end visited relatives for several days. They returned Sunday bringing Mrs. Julian Johnson, who had been visiting in Thomasville home with them. Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Thom as and Mr. andr-Mrs.. JI. L. Gat lin, Jr., attended the opening dance of the season at Lumina, Wrightsville Beach, Saturday night with Guy Lombardo’s or chestra playing. They spent Sun day at Topsail Beach. Mrs.- Paul Dickson, Sr. and Mrs. Lawrence Poole spent Thursday night with Mrs. Poole’s sisters. Miss Madge Coble and Mrs. Jo Parker, at their home near Liberty, and went to Greens boro Friday. Everette Stevens, who was patient at the Veterans Hospital in Fayetteville for several weeks, returned to his home in.Laurin- burg last Thursday. Mr. Steven^ expects to return to his work at Hoke Drug Conipany the latter part of the week or the first of next , week. Mrs., C. Stephens has been a patient at .Highsmith . hospital since Thursday of last week. Jack Morris and Miss'Nora Mae Gamer of Franklinton were we^ end guests of‘Mrs. 'A. R. Morris. Miss Lizzie Niven, Mr. and Mrs. Riley Willis and Jeap Willis left Moi^ay for Dunedin . and St.- Petersburg, Florida, to spend this week visHtog Miss Niven’s broth-* ers, Percy, Reece and Dwight Niven and their families. ^ Mrs. Atoyme Sevan had as her guests Sunday, Mrs. Grady Bry- ,ant, Mr. and MrL Austin Bryant and Mr. an4 Mrs. Amos Bryant, all of Thomasville. Mrs. J. A Wilson has been quite sick and confined to her bed since last Thursday. Her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Parrott of Sumter, S. C. canie Saturday. Mr. Parrott returned home Sunday but Mr^. Parrott remained to spend this, week with her mother. At last reports Mrs. Wilson was reported to be 'im proving nicely. Miss Doris Keith of Salem col- lege spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. C, Keith. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lundy and family sp«nt Sunday in Cheraw,, S, C. with Mrs. Lundy’s mother, Mrs. Ida Graham. Mr. and Mrs. .Bill Davis and baby*6f Columbia, S, C. spent the week end with Mrs. Christian Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tapp and daughter, Marylin, spent Sunday in-Charlotte with . Mrs., Tapp’s father, H. N. WilUams. MrSi. Charles J. Wirth and dau- ^ter left Monday for Montreat, where they -will spend a few days with Mrs. Wirth’s sister, Bfcs. FYancis Wyly. Mrs. Wirth is en route to her home in Helena, Montana, after having spent sev eral weeks with her father, E. L. Peele. She came especially to at tend toe marriage of her sister Nancy to Francis Wyly. 0- dORRECTION The News-Journal regrets that two names were unintentionally ommitted from a news items last week; that of Mrs. W. R. Barring ton and Mrs. A. K. Currie, who enjoyed the vpry gracious hospi tality of the Sanford Music club and took active part on the pro gram presented by the Chami- nade club of RaefprS on April 30. James Hendrix spent several days last week in Greensboro^ where he attended a frozen foods; convention. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson McBryde visited relatives in Goldsboro over the week end. Mrs. Julian Johnson, who re turned home Sunday after a two week visit to her brothers and- sisters in Thomasville, Ga., is quifo sick. While away Mrs. John son went with a party on a fish ing trip down on the Gulf of Mexico. Northwest for such projects as power development, while far smaller sums are being allotted to the South. He then charged that such legislation- as Taft- ^rtley and a hitoer Minimum -wage is aimed ^irectly at the Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mc' Bryde of Waynesboro, Virginia announce the birth of a daugh ter, Karens Faye, Thursday, May 5- . ■ ’ ■ Mrs. McBryde was the former Miss Geraldine Parrish of Red Springs. . ^t. Mary Frances Tapp, who has been stationed at Fort Bragg Hospital No. 1, for the past sev eral years, is spending a 45 day furlough with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt Tapp, at Tim- berland. At the end of her fur lough Lt. Tapp will leave for Okinawa where she expects to be stationed for the next two years. Mrs. H. E. Stin^comb. who has been visiting relatives here for the past three we^s returned to her home in Black Mountain this week. She was accompanied home by Mrs. Annie Currie Elam of Fayetteville. , Rub^a^ab*dub tie siiliack SMSM is same »*' b the place to come for real Ford Service. By "home" we mean yoor Ford Dealer. We know your Ford from A to Z. We know, the to «*ve you time, money and trouble. , Youa know what we mean when you reap the benefits of our: 1 f ! frigidaiiBMasterH Md ikowa tU-ll $299.75 OM Mdt (, 7,9 a. B. from $209.75 It’s really big! It's ntml It’s looded with exclusive fea tures ond gives you more food storage space thon ever before In the some# kitchen area. Has Meter-Miser mech anism, large Super-Freexeir Chest, Full-Width Hydrotor... and many other -ftphtie^. . . . and.we’re ready with our collec tion of strictly undercover sunbocks that moke full use of their little boleros and jackets-when the sun goes down . . . bore-shouldered dresses that wish fo/ the sun by day; the stars by night! In cotton broadcloth with eyelet or Schiffli embroidery placed here and there. Summer pastels; sizes 9 to 15 and 12 to 18 in the group. $5.95 Yow Ford Oealir i^M you to litto t^tiio Frod Mlot Show Soodoy Eoooiop-NBC Hotwork. EM"iw-CBS Hotwork. Soo yoor oowtpaptr for timo lod ititioo. ■ /.’i Baucom RAEFORD AUTO CO. Ddueuin I II* Appliance Co. | V/OllinS Uept. Phone 251-1 Raeford, N. C. Thirteen years of Satisfying Sales and Service! Phone 322-1 Raeford, N. C. Raeford, i if
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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May 12, 1949, edition 1
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