Newspapers / Jones County Journal (Trenton, … / Feb. 21, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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XiAFF OF THE WEEK "Good evening, sir—I'm selling doorknobs that glow in the dark.. " THE BAFFLES By Mahoney JIM WHEEDLE-YOU Me BACK MV SNOW YOU BORROWED! ALWAYS BORROWING AND . RETURNING! WHY, YES. f REMEMBER THIS SHOVEL. ONLY ONE OF ITS MAKE I HAD.BUT I SOLD IT TO NEITHER OF YOU.MNSY JONES BOUGHT IT ' ___ MCE FELLA, '«| HENRY. HAVEN'T } SEEN MUCH OF HIM YEH. ** LATELY. /GOOD OL' S |—HENRY JONES. "JOE BEAVER" By Ed Nofziger Forest Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture "Public recreation areas in our national forests are swamped, and we must have more places to play.' By LTN CONNELLY "MY «*T» Bdwmrfl * * E- Morrow, "does not go so far as to say that there’s some thIn8 dishonest about a man mak ing a living merely by talking. But ha doas think there’s some thing doubtful about it.” . . . This alt Hilda of one-time Greensboro. 1T.O, termer ROseoe C. Murrow, J“a made a deep impression on son Edward B. Murrow ^It is re flected in every phase of brilliant mpwMng of the man who narrates CSS-TV’S "See It How” as weU as broadcasting the nears five times weekly on radio ... Ed Murrow | was bor^ in Greensboro in 1008, but his temily moved to the Puget Sound section of Washington state when he was six, and Murrow al ways has considered himself a Washingtonian. He has a secret yen to go back there to live Murrow worked his way through high school and Washington State College as a Northwestern timber cruiser and logger . . . Several hold-over habits from his North western days still distinguish him in his New York office ... He likes to work with his collar open, he’s a fresh-air fiend, keeping the windows up all the time, and when he feels particularly happy, he i breaks out into ribald logging *°n8» . . . After graduating from, college, Murrow became president of the National Student Federation of America, traveling extensively . . . Then he became assistant di rector of the Institute of interna tional Education, a more sedentary Job . . . But Hitler had cut out his work for him . . . The educational director went to the aid of threat ened professors, endangered by the crazed book burners, and brought 288 of them to safety. Hired by CBS in 1935 to be Di rector of Talks and Education, Murrow soon moved out of the cultured orbit . . . For Hitler was on the march ... In 1938, he was en route to Poland to set up a School of the Air broadcast . . But the Nazis moved into Austria . . . Thft program never came oil KEILIG-LEVINE OF KINSTON, INC. Nichols '<D\ BLENDED vVHiSKtY ■ ".* ■■ ■ l $2.10 $335 [ pint filth sttnu* Fordomatic, white sidewall tires (if available/) optional at extra cost. Equipment, accessories, • and trim subject to change without notice. Heres the big new°p! JMMD ... most powerful car in its class! <3 i Designed lo out-perform...out-ride... out-size any other lew-priced car oa the American Road! • Never before did so little money buy perform ance to match that of the ’62 Ford. Take your choice of new Mileage Maker Six, orStrato-Star V-8. No other car in its class can equal Ford’s smooth riding, comer-hugging roadability. No other can match its new beautiful Coachcraft Bodies . ;. its huge curved one-piece windshield and car-wide rear window... its convenient Center-Fill Fueling i.. its Power-Pivot Clutch and Brake Pedals. Hera is a car that is truly the ablest car on the American Road ... a car that meets 'the widest range of motorists’ needs. F.Timnim, it carefully, t ’’Test Drive” it. You’ll agree you can’t buy betterl NEW! 101-h.p: High-Compression MILEAGE MAKER SIX! 'nOWIIKMhk High-Compressim STRATO-STAR V-81 NEW COACHCRAFT BODIES SEE YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER Conveniently Luted in Your Telephone Directory
Jones County Journal (Trenton, N.C.)
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Feb. 21, 1952, edition 1
2
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