I , Jni'VJAIX I V, |V/r? ^??? ?? Henry Block has 17 reasons why you should come to us for income tax help. Reason 1. We are income tax specialists. We ask the right questions. We dig for every honest deduction. We want to leave no stone unturned to make sure you pay the smallest legitimate tax. DEBLOCK The income tax people RAEFORD HOTEL f Open 9 a.m.-6 p.m. weekdays 9-5 Sat. Phone 875-5330 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY The Sale VouVe Been Waiting For Entire Stock Ladies' Dresses Over $00 To Chowe % price f 1/2 Sizes From Short and Long op.3toe Sugar's 9 6 OF RAEFORD ? 12:30 Afternoon Area Incidents Burglars Were Busy Burglars were busy over ihe holidays and sheriff's deputies are investigating a number of reported break ? ins. Arthur Robinson. Rt. I, Raeford. told deputies his trailer in Harmony Heights was broken into sometime between Deo. 20 and Jan. 5, and a tape deck, speakers. TV, radio and other items stolen. The loss is listed as S752.BO, according to the report. Ann H. Gtllis, Rt. 4. Fayettevjlle, complained her home was entered Dec. 21 and a Zenith TV and stand valued at S800 were stolen. Mrs. Cecil V. Darogan, Rt. I. Raeford. reported her home was broken into between Dec. I1) and Jan. 4 and listed as missing are a stereo and foodstuffs with a value of SI47. A thief apparently mindful of tooth decay broke into the West Hoke School sometime during the Christmas holiday and took a portable cassette recorder, three toys, and a tube of toothpaste. Entry was made by breaking windows, according to the report. A thief evidently unconcerned with cavities entered Richard McPhatter's pool room and store on Rt. I and stol four packs of cigarets, Tour packs o chewing gum, and S8 in change. A new home under constructs belonging to Robert Bostic, Rt. I Lumber Bridge, was entered Dec. 21 and building supplies valued at S3 removed. Curtis McNeill, Wagram, told deputie. McNeill's Grocery on 401 Bypass wai entered sometime Jan.4 between 2:40 3:10 a.m. and a small amount of cash cigarets. and cigaret lighters taken Kntry was gained by kicking in i window in the door, according to the complaint. Ronald Locklear, Rt. I, Raeford. reported the Messadonia Church basement was broken into by breaking a window and a water pump, valued at SI30, and a box of .38 ammunition stolen. Raeford Police Chief Leonard Wiggins reported all was quiet in the big city. John Manning. 17, of 804 Donaldson Ave., Raeford sustained -a gunshot wound Friday night in an accidental shooting at the home of a friend. According to deputies, Steve Mart, was showing a 30.06 rifle to Manning about '> p.m.. when the gun accidently discharged, hitting Manning in the right Manning was taken to Moore Memorial Hospital in Pinehurst and admitted. His condition was not disclosed. Hottel Picked Charles T. Hottel. Mutual ? United of Omaha atea representative, was recently chosen lor membership in Leading Producers Round Table for Gold-1974 by the International Association of Health Underwriters. Hottel. employed through G.A. Richardson Agency. Winston-Salem, is a salesman of the month. STOP!! Wanted experienced Agent for large insurance debit. Established business with well known Co. Do not apply unless you want to earn 10,000 per year. Excellent training and full fringe benefits. Call or Write Jim Morris, Manager Southern Life Insurance Co. P.O. Box 89 Laurinburg, N.C. 28352 Phone 1 276 7229 ? ji " STORES GUARANTEED SATISFACTION imMRRmPKRK kg-? _ ? Sr. HEAVY DUTY PAPER TOWELS ??= A_ ;.,df ift i Inari K ? K J / sv:V". vs ~ heavy dutTj h-. i HL SHOP WITH US SAVINGS UP TO 70% SAVE 43c ON 32 OUNCE LISTERINE REGULAR OR H.D. 16 or. intinsivi cam _ _ FAMOUS BRAND BATH BEADS how 730 MOTOR OIL 75 OZ. INTENSIVE CARE ? mm HERBAL BATH 15 OZ. INTENSIVE CARE ??? . _ . 73* 30 OR 40 WEIGHT 51.53 NOW SAVE 31< . BOX OF 30 DAYTIME - a a YOUR PAMPERS '1.88 I CHSLC[ DISNEY CHARACTER NOVELTY KIDS - - TOOTHBRUSHES ? ? 4 - S1 SOLID COLOR 11" > 11" 6 PACK WASHCLOTHS SAVE UP TO 40?f DETERGENT 1 \ EACH DECORATOR FRINGE SOFA PILLOWS -S1.57 20" * 34" FLUFF \ AREA RUG ?'? ? nows1 SIZE NOVILTY ZODIAC PEG S3.47 SMOKING STAND S1.93 SAVt 66.' WHIN you ?UY S ' DAN G'*LS SIZE 4-14 LEMON OR PINK 32 OZ. FAMOUS MOP & GL0^g "c"2 -s1 It/'. ^ ACETATE PANTIES 28c QUALITY ladies' . FLUFFY BOOTIES 2 PR 1.00 foil ? ? 4 ? 99c rJHA "TWIN 12" x 25' ALUMINUM ~ 'k ~ OR NO-IRON SHEETS 944"?' FOAM FILL BED PILLOW REG. $1.27 NOW 99* y LADIES WARM VALUES TO $15 g WINTER JACKETS s8 EACH *??? LADIES COORDINATE POLYESTER SLACKS YJlu.? i ^ LADIES LONG SLEEVE VALUES TO $S BLOUSES PAIR ? ' SAVINGS OF 39r, AND MORE INFANTS ACRYLIC BOOTIE SET ' as ? -.-'2.93 MENS HANDSOME DOUILE KNIT DRESS SLACKS ' -'4.88 MENS COTTON CREW SOCKS ? 2 - '1 ?OTS WARM WINTER ACRYLIC SWEATERS- - '1.93 (OTS UNDERWEAR PACKAGE OF BRIEFS & T-SHIRTS ? 2 - *1 SLIGHT IRREGULARS v LADIES FASHION ? KNIT TOPS OR ? SLEEPWEAR YOUR CHOICE 193 | .ACH VALUES TO $6 MEN S RUGGED FOOTWEAR!^ PUKIJ GOOD THKOUOH 1ATURDAYI 6 INCH 9 EYELET 9 6?Uth ^"cT^'nMn^?^?rd ' N C", WORK SHOE 5 PAC BOOT SB I NEW STORE HOURS: Man. thru Thiir. 9 til 6 - Fri. 9 til 9 CHOKE 6*'TO IO'/j S*. ? tH ? - Sun. 1 til ? BUNDLED UP - These pre-tchoolers walking along Elwooil Avenue Tuesday morning after a trip to the library, are well bundled against the cold air, unprotesting, although some of the littlest ones seem unaccustomed to the heavy gear. Library News Novel Reaffirms Values; America Is Examined By Frances Edwards "Next of Kin," by Gladys Hasty Carroll, (S7.95), is a novel about getting acquainted. The theme is how family heritage affects the lives of people-these people live in Maine where the author is as much at home as the potato. William Crowley, a down-East loner, has spent his sunset years writing a family history about the Sturtevants and the Crowleys. One rainy day there appears at his door a pair of bedraggled "hippies," boy and girl. The boy just happens to be the last of the Sturtevants, possibly the last of his clan, and the girl is pregnant. William helps them settle into the old Sturtevant place after feeding them and helping out with spare furniture, local knowledge and many kindnesses. Their pact is that William will tell them about the Sturtevant past and they will tell him about their present. William puts them in touch with 6 generations of Yankees, including a live grandfather in California. Larry and Lisa put down roots, till the soil, practice domestic arts, get married, have a baby and shamelessly glorify the nesting instinct. The author has a special ability to make the characters live; "Next of Kin" is a warm and loving story that reaffirms the abiding values. At the other end of the scale we find "Helter Skelter: the True Story of The Manson Murders," by Vincent Bugliosi. (SIO.OOl, on the best seller lists. It has sold 65.000 copies and is a Book-of-the-Month selection. It is about the sensational murder case of the Tate-LaBianca mass killings for which Charles Manson and some of his "family" were convicted. Bugliosi. Los Angeles D.A. who prosecuted the case considers it his biggest of 14 murder cases. He did his own investigating, working 100 hours a week; the three tey elements of proof were One-motive Manson's vision of "helter skelter" -a ace war triggered by the atrocious nurders he ordered. Two-domination enabling Manson to order family nembers to carry out the killings), and Three-the testimony of Linda Kasabian, he only witness to cooperate with the irosecution. The author characteriaes lanson as an evil, sophisticated con nan. Those who carried out the Hinders had considerable homicidal ige. he thinks. The Manson murders are istrnct in American crime annals ecause Manson importuned others to lurder for him and because the victims ?ere faceless, chosen as establishment ?mbols. Manson was intelligent (I.Q., 21) but his mind was aboil with aeism. satantsm, Scientology and nanations from the Beatles' songs, nson was his only home. At the end of le trial he told Mr Bugliosi, "You iven't accomplished anything You st sent me back to where 1 came Dm." "Silence came over the lettuce lake, e silence of animals sunning and of leaves soliciting the sunlight; a big mother alligator snoozing in the mud, a languid young cottonmouth draped on a log. A star-shaped bladderwort floating in the water presented a one-way trapdoor to insects... "As 1 poked around Miami looking for trouble, a sidewalk huckster huckstered me into the Roxy... The band played-slow. sultry numbers..." Florida Ramble," By Alex. Shoumatoff, (S7.95), is a pleasure ramble. He didn't know exactly what he would find when he set off in his 1964 Olds, armed with his guitar and a winning smile. His special interest was the natural history: topography, rivers, lakes, wetlands, flora and fauna-but it turned out that in Florida man and nature were just so mixed up with each other that there was no thinking about them apart. He dropped in at Miami's high spots, inspected a few swamps, studied the problem of the vanishing wildlife, visited a Seminole Indian reservation, visited a trailer park, chatted with retirees, spent New Year's Uve in a flophouse celebrating with migrant fruit-pickers, and paid a nerve-racking visit to Disney World. His report shows Florida is the most complex and the most excitingly improbably of the United States. "The Real America," by Ben J. Wattenberg. ($10.00,1 is a statistical portrait of the American people. The author has drawn from the incredible bank of facts of the U.S. Census, data developed by industry , and by the opinion pollsters who are continually probing the public mind. It is a heartening portrait of the U.S. but is bound to be controversial. The author believes Jefferson's words: "America is still the last best hope of mankind." BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE Arabia. Jan. 14 Mrs. Archie Maxwell. Mrs. Bertha liendrix. Mrs. Dan Hagan. Mrs. Lillian White. Mrs. Aretha Ray. Mrs. William Harris. Mrs. II.J. Chason. Mrs. J.E. McGougan. Mrs. Johnny McGougan, Mrs. Gloria Konkol. Mrs. C arolyn Pugh. Mrs. Bob Geantham. Mrs. Brenda Tillman. Mrs. Jean Wilson, Mrs. Marlene Russi, Mrs. Janet E. Nubby, Mrs. Susan Skinner, and Mrs. Mann Hwa Smith. CAP Board Will Meet The Board of Directors of Four-County Community Services, Inc., will meei on Tuesday January 14, at the Robeson County Library Auditorium in Lumberton at 8 P.M. James Allred of the North Carolina Manpower Council will speak on The new emergency jobs program. Philip Diehl of Raeford is chairman. Welcome Wagon International Inc. is looking for an individuals . . who likes people . . . can work independently . . . is well motivated Greet newcomers and work with local merchants. Flexible hours, car necessary. Send Name and Address To: )OB OFFER P. O BOX 550 RAEFORD, N. C. 28376

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