■ ■gjpr^. p • THE NEW 1936 - ^ General Electric Refrigerators j|s_ Now Ready For Your , Inspection The sooner you have your G-E Refrigerator In your kitchen the sooner you will begin sav ing about *10 a month on your food budget. G-E Refrigerators are powered with the fam ous sealed-in-sted n»xhanism that now givea “DOUBLE THE COLD” AND USES 409b LESS CURRENT. As Little As. $10 Down and 30 Months To Pay t ■ _ Reddy Kilowatt Remarks: Although the price of living has gone k up In the last rew years; you can still save money by having a O. B In your kitchen, by saving on week end specials^ and letting me save the left-overs. MAXTON BASEBALL TEAM WINS OVER ROSE HILL Rose Hill, March 31.—The glee club of Presbyterian Jun ior College, Maxton, was enter tained in the homes of Presby terians here during the week end, and a banquet supper was given for them by the 'Presby terian church of Teachey on Monday night. On Monday af j ■ ' " BRIEF; VERY BRIEF | Reserve member banks hold 912,300,000,000 U. S. Debt. Internal revenue collections rise in all lines. U. S.-Canada trade is lifted by the reciprocal treaty. .Relaxation held to be the key to Jong life for the busy man. Roosevelt asks billion and half for relief; appeals to 'in dustry. Income tax receipts rise 45.6 per cent over those of year ago. ternoon a baseball game was arranged between members of| the visiting glee club and the local town team, the visitors winning 10-3. , Furnishing much interest was “Mike”, a Cuban and a star player for the glee club team. He was unable to speak English and a fellow countryman, “To ny”, served as interpreter. GRADE 'MOTHERS DUPLIN P.-T. A. FETED RECENTLY Rose Rill, March 30.—TheJ grade mothers of the local P.-' T. A. were entertained Thurs day afternoon by Mrs. Q. H. Barnes, chairman of grade mo-! thers. Mrs. Barnes was hostess' in her new bungalow. Reports of the years’ work were made.) Games and contests featured the social hour. Prizes .were won by Mesdames L. A. Wilson and C. L. Faircloth. The hos tess served sandwiches and coffee. Grade mothers present were Mrs. Lena Teachey, Mrs. O. H. Barnes, Mrs. Katie. Teachey, J Mrs. R. Young, Mrs. W. M. Ro jchelle, Mrs. L. A. Wilson, Mrs. H. W. Farrior, Mrs. J. E. Pope, Mrs. Arthur Ward, and Mrs. S. B. Herring. FARM WOMEN PLAN FEDERATION MEET (Continued from Page 1) to the meeting, which promises to be one of the best eVer held in the county and presents a well-arranged program of ev ents. Special music will be render ed by Mrs. L. K. Alderman and Mrs. W. H. Hall, both of Rose Hill. The Outlaw Jubilee Band will also entertain. Each club will put on a live- minute stunt. Mrs. F. F. Newkirk, " Rose Hill, is president of the Duplin County Federation of Home Demonstration Clubs, succeed ing Mrs. Hubert Boney, Tea chey. She was installed at the Achievement Day held during the fall. All of the 17 clubs in the county^ are expected to he represented in this semi annual meeting. CLUB CELEBRATES 12TH ANNIVERSARY (Continued from Page One) W. C. and chairman of dis tricts, Mrs. F. W. McGowan, Mrs. John A. Gavin, district president, Mrs. N. B. Boney, Miss Fannie Aldridge* and the sixth past presidents, Miss Lu la M. Hinson, Mrs. John A. Ga vin, Mrs. N. B. Boney, Mrs. D. S. Williamson, Mrs. L. Souther land and Mrs. H. D. Williams. Among the features of the meeting was a straw vote for the next Governor of North Carolina. Of the 44 votes cast Clyde Hoey was the major re cipient, getting a total of 30. “Sandy*’ Graham came next with nine votes and Dr. Ralph McDonald followed with five. John McRae and Gilliam Gris som failed to score. Misses Nancy Jussely, Pat tie Loftin, Anna Carr, Dorothy Wells and Eugenia Forlaw, a committee from the Junior Wo man’s Club, assisted in serving a three course dinner. Itaily reorganizing her army on basis of speed and mobility. Secretary Ickes says that in dustry fails to help recovery. REHOBETH CHAPTER HAS INSTALLATION SERVICE Rose Hill, March 30.—The Rehobeth chapter, 0. E. S. held! its installation service on Fri day night with Mrs. Carlton Scott, past worthy matron of the local chapter, was installing officer and Mrs. Stakes Wells as marshal. New officers are: Worthy Matron, Miss Sallie Mae John-1 son, Worthy Patron, Rev. S. G. Harness, Associate Worthy Pa tron, J. Benton; Secretary, Mrs. W. C. Worsley; Treasurer, Mrs. Oscar Fussell; Chaplain, Mrs. I. L. Hawes; Warder, Mrs. Zeb Bradshaw; Sentinel, Jesse Fus sell; Conductress, Mrs. N. M. Scott; Associate Conductress, Mrs. Carlton Sqptt; Marshal, Mrs. Stokes Wells; Organist, I Mrs. H. C. Marshall; Star Points, Mrs. F. Newkirk, Mrs. Minnie Symons, Miss Bessie F. Johnson, Mrs. L. Bradshaw and Mrs. H. S» Johnson. MAGNOLIA GRADUATING (Continued from Page 1) eanor Wilson and Alice King, who were members of the 8th grade, were dressed attractive It’s Hardware Time Spring time is Hardware time—last year—this year and every year. And we can supply your every need again this season. Come in and get our prices on BLACK HAWK PLANTERS - REX and McCOY GUANO DISTRIBUTORS - LYNCHBURG GUAR ANTEED PLOWS - POULTRY WIRE - FEEDERS, ETC. We carry a full line of casting for practically ev ery make of plow—Also corn and been seed. SPECIAL PRICES ON HORSE COLLARS Octagon and Luzianne Coupons Redeemed Here A. C. Hall Hwd. Co. WALLACE, N.'C. Iy in Irish colleen costumes. The entertainment was di rected by Elma Pope, president of the Junior class. Speakers were L. H. Fussell, Ray Quinn, Stacy Evans, Gladys Waters, Mae Marshburn, Elma Pope, Fulton Bradshaw, Evelyn Far rell, Onida Lucas, Alma Tuck er, Rosa Lee Murphy, Richard Wilson, Rebecca Groves, Billy King. After the banquet the group of 48 boys and girls enjoyed a theatre party. ANNOUNCE CLINICS START APRIL 14TH (Continued from Page One) fects found in their children and get them in good physical April 21, Chinquapin, 10-12 o’ clock; April 22, Warsaw, 10-12 ' o’clock; April 23, Beulavillc, *86$^ 12 o’clock; April 28, Olbifji 12 o'clock; Potter’s Mill, 1:00 2:00 o’clock; April 24, TeachfjlV# 10-12 o’clock, April 28, Kenans- * ville, 10-12 o’clock. PURE OIL PRESENTS “The Diary of Jimmie Mattern” -starring- | JIMMIE MATTERN Famous Round-The-World Flier EVERY MON, TUES, WED, THURS, FRL WPTF, Raleigh, 7:30 p. m. WBT Charlotte 6:45 p. m. WLW. Cincinnati, 6:15 p. m. WSB, Atlanta,p. m.M WMFD, Wilmington, 5:80 p. m. A TREAT FOR EVERY RADIO FAN Watch Newspapers for deatils of the Million Dol lar Contest Beginning March 16. Cape Fear Oil Co. J. A. Harrell, Distributor WALLACE, N. C. Proof of Jmd MOVE up to high-priced car performance—without the extra cost! The thrill of driving a Ford V-8 can be matched only in cars costing hundreds of dollars more. The Ford V-8 is responsive. It picks op more,easily. At all speeds you get the smooth, effortless flow of pow«r which means truly fine car performance. —And in a Ford V-8 you get this performance at leas cost. bringing die V-8 to the low price field, Ford designed an engine, which with the dual downdraft carburetor, simply takes the gas used by »"4* of similar she and splits it into eight equal charges. In fact, the Ford V-8 with its sparkling performance and 8 cylinder smooth* ness is the moat economical car Ford overbuilt. Definite cost records of large passenger car fleet owners show actual savings in the opera tion of the Ford V-8 over previous Ford models. Test this great car yourself. Get behind the wheel and drive it. Feel *he thrill of modem V-8 performance. Then, remember, that it’s over all economy is greater than those famous Ford models of past days. IOUr Ford Dealer . fMMilm Mrii tkrmmgk V CC. % F*r m mmpmid bmlmuam pima inamrmnma, ON THB All-Far* Syfki.y Orllulra. » F.M. B.S.T. Colon bio Not. work-Pro* Wool*,. Taoolajra an CBS. MBjt an NBG Blaa Natoork, ptjato ioioo P.M.B.S.T. Owner's record shows — V-8 OPERATING C0ST5 ;,;'.;v:l||‘ AVERAGED— , 1 ■t LESS thiin o zff MOMEL AV • Fcom the records of » odtiooefly > known company* over a total eftere t*«K of more than 30.ooo.bMf mile*^^ See the new line of safety Fords now on display in our showroom. Ri.Anr MOTOR COMPANY

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