Miller's Asheboro, N.C. City Directory [1951-1952], Part 1

Author: Miller, Chas. W. (Charles W.);Southern Directory Co.
Publication date: 1951
Publisher: Southern Directory Co.
Number of Pages: 336


USA > North Carolina > Randolph County > Asheboro > Miller's Asheboro, N.C. City Directory [1951-1952] > Part 1


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org.


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28


PHONE 2251


SAVINGS INSURED UP TO $10,000.00


Thos. F. Bulla, Jr., Sec .- Treos, RANDOLPH SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION "ESTABLISHED 1917"


L. F. Ross, President "


122 N. FAYETTEVILLE ST."


FARLOW FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE PHONE 2115 201 N. FAYETTEVILLE ST.


ASHEBORO, N. C.


THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK


-MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE BANK FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION


101 SUNSET AVE.


PHONE 2037


BRUTON'S DRY CLEANERS


CLEANERS - HATTERS


"DRY CLEANING AT ITS BEST"


420 W. SALISBURY ST. PHONE 3222


PLYMOUTH


"'Line Up With Bear"


Asheboro Motor Co.


Chrysler - Plymouth Sales & Service


266 N. FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE 2193


HALL-KNOTT - 129 Sunset Ave.


T. IRVIN HALL


MEN'S AND STUDENTS' WEAR


EDGAR N. KNOTT


CLINCHFIELD COAL .


FREDERICK STOKERS . FUEL OIL


HADLEY COAL COMPANY - Phone 4155


152 W. Academy St


KIZER


Launderers and Cleaners, Inc.


LICENSES SANVITOMI CLEAXER


PHONE 2131


The Library of the University of North Carolina


LVX


LIBERTAS


IDIS


CAROL . SEPTE


Collection of forth Caroliniana


This book was presented


bp Raleigh Chamber of Commerce C971.76


A81m


1951-52


AL DIRECTORY


ARDWARE


OMPANY


RATED


ND DEALERS IN Till Supplies


Iaterials - Lumber


Phones 2450 & 4127


ASHEBORO PRINTING CO., INC.


"A Complete Printing Service"


102 HEDRICK ARCADE


156 S. FAYETTEVILLE ST.


PHONE 3132


3


ADVERTISERS' SPECIAL DIRECTORY


Try that Good Gulf Gasoline


GULF


Gulf Pride - Oils - Gulf Lube


Patronize


GU


This book must not be taken from the Library building.


The Ban


W. J. ARMFIELD


C. W. McCR


R. L. DO


S. J.


CAPITAL - SURI


MEMBER FEDERAL L


17 S. Fayetteville


4


ADVERTISERS' SPECIAL DIRECTORY


AMERICAN AMOCO


GAS


PHONE 2203


CLARK'S SERVICE STATION


Amoco Tires, Tubes and Batteries 30 MINUTE BATTERY RECHARGING SERVICE


LUBRICATION - WASH - WAX


"WRECKER SERVICE"


COLD DRINKS - TOBACCOS AND ACCESSORIES 843 W. Salisbury St.


LUCAS NATIONAL, INC.


MANUFACTURERS OF


BEDROOM, DINING ROOM, LIVING ROOM AND KITCHEN FURNITURE


- -


Phone 2105


738 S. Fayetteville St.


Asheboro, N. C.


5


TITLE PAGE


MILLER'S ASHEBORO, N. C.


CITY- DIRECTORY


VOL. VI 1951-1952 VOL. VI


Containing an Alphabetical Directory of Business Concerns and Private Citizens, Occupants of Office Buildings and Other Business Places Including a Complete Street and Avenue Guide, Buyers' Guide, Numerical Telephone Directory;


And A Complete Classified Business Directory


SOUTHERN DIRECTORY CO.


ASHEVILLE, N. C. .. PUBLISHERS


Member Association of North American Directory Publishers (See General Index, page 6)


Issued Biennially


PRICE -


- $20.00


ASHEBORO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE-LOCAL AGENTS


ASHEBORO, N. C.


ASHEVILLE, N. C.


(Copyright, October, 1951 - by Chas. W. Miller)


NOTE-This publication has been carefully revised (a new canvass hav- ing been made by competent parties), but it is distinctly understood that no responsibility is assumed for any errors or ommissions that may have occurred in such revision. -PUBLISHERS.


6


INDEX


GENERAL INDEX


Page


Abbreviations


101


Alphabetical List of Names


101


Associations and Clubs.


293


Buyers Guide


17


City Government.


107


Classified Business Directory. 1


292


County Government (Randolph)


239


Index to Advertisers


6


Miscellaneous Directory


16


North Carolina State Government.


16


Numerical Telephone Directory


49


Preface


7


Street Directory


317


Title Page


5


United States Government.


16


INDEX TO ADVERTISERS


Acme Hosiery Mills Inc p 34


Bunch Insurance Agency


back cover


Amos Furniture Co


_p 31


Burge Flower Shop


p 29


Asheboro Concrete Products Co. 23


Burkhead Furniture Co


bottom


lines


Burkhead Insurance Agency


p 37


Asheboro Electric Co


back cover


Burkhead Transfer & Fuel Co p 22


Asheboro Furniture Co


bottom lines


Burlington Mills Corp p


36


Asheboro Hosiery Mills Inc.


p 35


Carolina Power & Light Co


p 25


Asheboro Insurance & Realty Co top lines


Causey Machine Co p 40


Asheboro Machine & Foundry Co ___ 40


Central Motor Co.


bottom lines


Asheboro Motor Co.


Cetwick Plant.


p 36


front cover and bottom lines


Chisholm-Brady Auto Finance Corp


top


lines


City Auto Service


.p 18


backbone


Asheboro Printing Co _p 2


Asheboro Tin


Shop


p 45


Asheboro Weaving Mill p 46


Auman Bros Feed & Seed Store


29


Auman-Robertson Construction Co


fly Z


Bank of Randolph The. p 3


Cut Rate House Furnishing Co


p 31


Delk Robt p 24


Birkhead & Neely Inc.


top lines


Bossong Hosiery Mills Inc. p 35


Economy Auto Store


bottom lines


Brown's Auto Supply Co


_p 18


Bruton's Dry Cleaners


front cover


1


I


I


1


1


J


1


I


I


1


1


I


1


1


1


1


I


1


1


1


1


1


1


1


1


I


1


1


1


I


1


1


I


1


1


1


I


1


1


1


1


I


I


1


1


1


I


I


1


1


I


1


1


J


I


I


1


1


1


I


1


1


1


I


1


1


I


I


I


1


1


Asheboro Music Co


p 42


Asheboro Plumbing & Heating Co bottom lines City Taxi.


Clark Motor Co top lines


Clark's Service Station


-p 4


Commercial College of Asheboro


p 21


Cox & Lewis Hardware Co


p 33


Cummings Frozen Foods


30


Bingham-Johnson Hardware Co p 33


Dixie Ice & Coal Co


bottom lines


Enterprise Oil Co. _p 32


Fagge's Esso Service


> 18


(Continued on Page 15)


1


1


I


Asheboro Drug Co.


top lines


7


PREFACE


ASHEBORO


"Center of North Carolina"


Preface


By WALTER HARGETT Member Publicity Committee ASHEBORO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE


AIR VIEW OF BUSINESS AREA OF ASHEBORO


Halfway between the Atlantic beaches and the Great Smokies, in the heart of the agriculutrally rich and industrially thriving Piedmont sec- tion of North Carolina, Asheboro is the county seat of 800-square-mile Randolph County and is located nearly, if not exactly, in the geographic- al center of the state.


It is about 180 miles east of Asheville, and is approximately the same number of miles northwest of Wilmington. It is 26 miles south of. Greensboro and 56 miles north of Pinehurst, the famous winter resort. The elevation of the city is 860 feet above sea level. The heart of the business district is on the highest level between two extensive water-


8


PREFACE


sheds, giving the city adequate drainage and freedom from floods. Streams on the eastern side of the city flow into Deep River and thence into the Cape Fear, while drainage on the western side of the city is into the Uwharrie River and thence into the Yadkin.


Asheboro's mean temperature, according to complete weather rec- ords kept over a period of 21 years, is 60.5 degrees. Zero temperatures are exceedingly rare and 100 degree temperatures have been recorded only a very few times at the Weather Bureau. Statistics over a long per- iod of time give Asheboro a yearly average of 132 clear days, 115 partly cloudy days and 118 cloudy days.


Asheboro is located amidst a range of long-eroded and timber cov- ered mountains, the Uwharrie Mountains, described by geologists as the weathered remnants of peaks which pre-dated the Great Smokies and in bygone ages rivalled the Alps in their grandeur. Although the small mountains surrounding Asheboro today are only several hundred feet high, they unfold a variety of beautiful scenery from every highway in the county.


POPULATION


Long known as the city that doubles its population every ten years, Asheboro's growth has far outstripped its city limits, which have not been extended in approximately 60 years. The 1940 Federal Census gave Asheboro a population of 6,981. With the expansion of many of its industrial plants and the steady construction of new industries, it is conservatively estimated that final reports from the 1950 Census will give Asheboro proper (Asheboro Township) a population of 13,900 and Greater Asheboro a population of 18,000. Randolph County's popula- tion is 50,804. (1951 City Directory 12,562)


----


ASHEBORO MUNICIPAL BUILDING


9


PREFACE


GOVERNMENT


Asheboro's non-partisan businesslike city government is directed by a Mayor and five City Commissioners elected every two years. Their policies are executed by a City Manager. Citizens are proud of their comparatively low tax rate of $1.40, and the progressiveness and finan- cial soundness of their municipal administration.


MANUFACTURING CENTER


A busy industrial center whose annual pay-roll long since passed the twelve million dollar mark, Asheboro has a wide diversity of in- dustries which include some of the largest hosiery mills in the state- both men and women, furniture plants manufacturing furniture for every room in the home, television tables, office desks and tables. Other huge industrial plants here include rayon and nylon weaving, as well as nylon throwing mills, one of the nation's leading flashlight battery plants, knitwear mills, flour mill, lumber plants, box manufacturers, ex- celsior plants, an overall manufacturing plant, chenille bedspread man- ufacturers, freezer locker plant and iron foundry. Many smaller in- dustries include the making of lingerie, neckties, handkerchiefs, T-Shirts, concrete block products, men's underwear, brooms, auto bat- teries, mattresses, ice cream and milk processing, venetian blinds, braid and tape, plastic laminating and several outstanding printing plants.


Comparatively new plants at Asheboro includes a Textile Machine Works which serves a wide area of Piedmont Carolina and adjacent territory.


PUBLIC UTILITIES


Electricity for lighting and power is supplied to Asheboro by Caro- lina Power and Light Co., which has vastly expanded its capacity and facilities in the Asheboro area since World War II. The REA also serves Randolph County through the Randolph Electric Membership Corpor- ation.


Asheboro's water supply is estimated by city officials to be ample for a city of ten times its population. For a number of years water has been pumped into the city from three lakes nearby. To supplement their supply, however, the city has in recent years constructed a huge dam across Back Creek about four miles west of here, impounding 1,453,000,000 gallons of water, estimated to be sufficient to serve a city of 80,000.


Treatment of Asheboro's water supply in a modern purification plant is handled in accordance with the latest methods under the care of an expert staff of technicians.


.Asheboro's telephone service has recently been expanded by con- struction of additional long distance facilities and installation of the dial system. Central Telephone Co., which serves Asheboro and vicinity as well as many other cities, this year moved into a new and modern telephone exchange building offering facilities designed to accommo- date Asheboro's continued growth.


10


PREFACE


Western Union's worldwide telegraph facilities are available through the local office in Asheboro.


Asheboro is served by two railroads-the High Point, Randleman, Asheboro and Southern Railway connecting with the Southern Railway's main line in High Point, and by the Norfolk and Southern Railway, con- necting with the Norfolk & Southern's main line at Star and the main line of the Seaboard Air Line at Aberdeen.


An intensive schedule of bus transportation to the north, south, east and west is provided daily to Asheboro by several inter-state and local bus lines. Five U. S. and State highways converge in Asheboro, furn- ishing convenient routes in all directions. They include US 220, US 64, US 311, NC 49 and NC 902.


FINANCIAL FACILITIES


Asheboro has two well established banks, the Bank of Randolph and the First National Bank, with combined resources of $11,500,000. Ran- dolph County Savings and Loan Association and Peoples Building and Loan Association, with resources totaling $4,200,000, finance much of Asheboro's steady construction activity.


EDUCATIONAL AND RELIGIOUS FACILITIES


Asheboro's accredited public school system offers extensive facili- ties for the education of both white and colored children. Asheboro's new high school building, built and equipped at a cost exceeding $750,- 000 including funds from a bond issue voted by the citizens, stands as a model among structures of its type in the nation. Asheboro has three elementary schools for white pupils and an elementary and high school for colored pupils, all of which have been considerably enlarged and re-equipped within the past few years.


With a state wide reputation as a center of religious activity, Ashe- boro has a proportionately large number of churches representing the following denominations: Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, Catholic, Congregational, Christian, Holiness, Friends, Protestant Episcopal, Evan- gelical and Reformed, Lutheran, Church of God and Wesleyan Metho- dist.


RECREATION AND SPORTS


Asheboro is an established center in the state and southeast for ac- tivities in several sports. Thousands of visitors come to Asheboro each year to attend the Kiwanis Club's Easter Monday Horse Show, which regularly brings entries from Maryland, Kentucky and Florida, and the Lions Club's annual State Semi-Pro Baseball Tournament.


A public nine-hole golf course is popular among residents of Ashe- boro and surrounding communities.


11


PREFACE


Directors of the Asheboro Country Club have completed a hand- some clubhouse adjacent to a beautiful lake near US Highway No. 64 a few miles west of the city, and have plans to develop the first nine holes of a projected 18-hole club golf course.


McCrary Athletic Field and Lindley Athletic Field, two of the best lighted athletic fields in the state, are used for intensive baseball and football schedules. The city-sponsored softball league operates a sum- mer schedule of night games under lights at the Memorial Park diamond.


No finer building and facilities for industrial and community recrea- tion can be found in the South than are afforded by the new building of the Acme-McCrary Employees Recreation Association. The splendid brick structure includes a huge gymnasium, equipped to seat 1,000 spectators, a glass-enclosed swimming pool for year-round use, bowling alleys, a cafeteria, a reading room, lounges, soda fountain and other ac- commodations. The Mccrary Eagles basketball team annually brings a representative schedule of college and semi-professional teams to Asheboro during the winter season.


ASHEBORO MEMORIAL SWIMMING POOL


A popular feature of Asheboro's recreation program is the $150,000 Asheboro Memorial Foundation, Inc. The first facility to be developed on the Foundation's 12-acre tract in the city is a modern swimming pool, operated during the summer by the City Recreation Department.


A Teen Age Club building constructed by the Kiwanis Club is widely used for meetings of young people and for dinner meetings of civic organization. Both the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars


12


PREFACE


have their own buildings which are used in connection with civic activites.


Asheboro's cvic spirit is evident in its wide variety of clubs and fraternal organizations, all of which furnish opportunity for social and . fraternal contacts which add to the joy of living in Asheboro.


AIRVIEW OF RANDOLPH COUNTY HOSPITAL


RANDOLPH HOSPITAL, INC.


Towering above green terraces and set amid flower gardens and trees in the heart of Asheboro, N. C., is Randolph Hospital, a 104-bed and 25-bassinet institution serving the 50,000 people of Randolph County.


A unique feature of the hospital is a solarium of violet-ray glass on top of the building, indirectly lighted through glass brick panels and furnished in resort type furniture - the only hospital solarium of its type in North Carolina.


This summer the third wing to the hospital, the Mccrary Memorial Wing, was formally opened to the public, and in January of this year an entirely new X-ray department was opened, headed by a board radiolo- gist and furnishing complete diagnostic and therapy facilities as well as radium therapy.


On June 18 Randolph Hospital School of Practical Nursing, fully ap- proved by the North Carolina Board of Nursing Standardization, was opened. The school admits a class of 12 students each six months for a one-year course, preparing students to take the N. C. State Board examination for licensed practical nurses.


13


PREFACE


Adjacent to the hospital and constructed of the same cream brick and white limestone is a modern nurses' home housing 42 members of the staff.


Auxiliary services at Randolph Hospital include a crippled children's clinic, held one day each month and supervised by an orthopedic surgeon. This clinic is sponsored by the Asheboro Rotary Club and provides free services for crippled indigent children in the county. The hospital has a blood bank which is a branch of the American Red Cross Blood Center in Charlotte, and a corps of 125 Red Cross Grey Ladies, recruited from all over Randolph County, who come to the hospital each afternoon and evening to receive visitors, distribute mail, care for flow- ers and operate a bookmobile to the patient's bedside.


In 1950 Randolph Hospital discharged slightly more than 5,000 pa- tients, including 649 newborn babies. A total of 2,451 operations were performed, including 1,013 majors and 1,438 minors. The medical staff includes 17 doctors on the active staff and five doctors on the courtesy staff.


ASHEBORO'S ECONOMIC POSITION-YEAR 1950


Bank Deposits-Dec. 31, 1950 $ 11,988,103.00


Bldg. & Loan Resources-Dec. 31, 1950 $ 3,946,029.31 Total Bank Debits 1950 $314,547,692.45


Total Postal Receipts 1950 $203,825.46


Electric Meters in use (city limits) Dec. 31, 1950 3790


Water Meters in Service (City Limits) Dec. 31, 1950 2952


Telephones in Use Dec. 31, 1950 3113


No. Bldg. Permits Issued in 1950 184


Value of Bldg. Permits Issued in 1950 $ 1,027,050.00


COUNTY HIGH IN WEALTH


Randolph's 1950 Census population of 50,804 represented a sub- stantial increase from the 1940 total of 44,554.


Although Randolph County is 26th among North Carolina's 100 coun- ties in population, according to the 1950 Census, Randolph ranks only 13th from the top in total value of property listed for taxation.


Randolph has a total of $57,394,967 in listed taxable property, accord- ing to figures published by the University of North Carolina News Letter. Of the total 71 per cent is real property, 27.2 per cent is tangible personal property and 1.8 is public service property assessed by the state board.


14


PREFACE


RANDOLPH COUNTY'S ECONOMIC POSITION


Randolph County ranked 17th in state in Industrial and Market out- put values during 1950. (Blue Book of Southern Progress)


Sales receipts and output value $195,000,000.00


(a) Manufacturing $146,000,000.00


(b) Retail Trade $ 24,000,000.00


(c) Farming 9,000,000.00 $


(d) Wholesale Trade $ 5,000,000.00


(e) Services & Professions $ 4,000,000.00


(f) Transportation - Utilities $ 3,000,000.00


(g) Construction $


3,000,000.00


(h) Finance and Real Estate $ 1,000,000.00


Randolph County Retail Sales 10 year span (N. C. Dept. of Tax Research)


1940 $ 4,966,455.00


1950 $22,407,024.00


Source of Farm Income 1950 (Source, Randolph County Farm Agent)


Commodity


Produced Value


(a) Tobacco 5,620.699 lbs $2,645,317.68


(b) Corn 1,337,950 bu. $2,006,900.00


(c) Wheat 324,000 bu. $ 810,000.00


(d) Oats 330,000 bu. $ 330,000.00


(e) Dairy Products - farm value $2,740,000.00


(f) Poultry, broilers, eggs $1,750,000.00


(g) Does not include minor crops, beef cattle and hogs. Production of beef cattle and sheep on increase.


-


.


ASHEBORO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE


Municipal Building


Phone 2360


15


INDEX


INDEX TO ADVERTISERS


(Continued from Page 6)


Farlow Funeral Home


front cover


Farm Implement & Supply Co.


27


Fetner-Moore Co.


insert


First National Bank The


front cover


Garner Florist


p 30


Garner-Morgan


Hardware Co


p 34


General Hardware & Lumber Co.


top lines and p 2


Grimes Jewelry Co.


p 39


H & H Clothing Co. p 22


H & S Insulation Co


p 37


Hadley Coal Co


front cover


Hall-Knott Inc.


front cover


Ham's Radio & Television Service


bottom lines


Hargett Walter L Jr


p 38


Hayworth Motor Co


top lines


Herlocker Oil Co.


back cover


Hinshaw Hosiery Mills


p 35


Holt D W & Co.


28


Home Building Inc.


back cover and p 21


Howell Clinton


p 24


Hudson-Belk Co


top


lines


Hunsucker Printing Co.


p 43


Ideal Electric Co


p 26


Jarrell & Son Motor Co


p 20


Jay's Service Station. p 18


John-David Photographers


back cover and p 41


Jones Department Store


top lines


Jordan Tin Shop


.p 45


Kearns Furniture Co.


top lines


Kenan Mutual Insurance Agency


fly X


Kivett Electric Co


p 26


Kizer Launderers & Cleaners Inc


front cover and top lines


Lambert Printing Co. bottom lines Linthicum W E & Son. .p 23 Long George Inc initial letter lines


Loutrel Radio Service


.p 43


Lucas National Inc. -p 4


McCrary Hosiery Mills Inc p 34


McLaurin Hosiery Plant p 36


M & J Finance Corp


p 39


Maple Grove Dairies


.p 41


Master Gulf Service Station fly X


Mid-State Insurance Agency Inc p 37 Watson Malcolm J back cover


Mid-State Motors Inc.


bottom limes


Whitley M C.


back cover


Mid-State Paper Box Co


p 21


Moffitt John T


p 38


Moore B C & Sons Inc


bottom lines


Motor Service Co.


p 20


Nance Chevrolet


Co


fly


Z


Neely Insurance Agency


p 38


Newton Welding & Engineering Co __ p 46


North Side Esso Service


p 19


North State Finance Co.


back cover


P & P Chair Co.


p 22


Painter Luther L


_p 42


Peoples Building & Loan Assn_ _ back cover


Pinehurst Textiles Inc


p 45


Presnell C C Roofing Co


p 24


Presnell-Durham Printing Co


p 43


Pugh Funeral Home


top and bottom stencils and top lines


Radio Service & Appliance Co.


.p 44


Randolph Home & Auto Supply Co.


top lines


Randolph Land Auction Co


fly Y


Randolph Loan Co


p 40


Randolph Motor Co


p 20


Randolph Oil


p 3


Randolph Plumbing & Heating Co. p 42


Randolph Savings & Loan Association .. front cover


Reaves Pharmacy


top lines


Reaves Walgreen Agency


bottom lines


Red Star Service Station. p 19


Robbins L C Paint & Paper Store p 41


Rogers Inc.


p 39


Sapona Manufacturing Co .p 34


Scott Book & Stationery Co.


bottom lines


South 220 Amoco Service Station. p 19 Southern Goods Corp insert


Southern Motors & Equipment Co p 28


Southern Oil Co


p 32


Standard Drug Store.


top lines


Stout's Poultry & Fish Market. .p 29 Stowe's Greenhouses Inc. top lines


Textile Machine Works.


fly Y


Trogdon Esso Station


bottom lines


Trogdon S E & Sons


p 25


Trollinger H Rupert.


p 44


Uptown Service Station


p 19


Vestal Motor Co.


bottom lines


Visk Bros Electric Co. p 27


Wood Mutual Agency


front stencil


Woodley Furniture Co.


bottom lines


518098


16


MISCELLANEOUS DIRECTORY


MILLER'S ASHEBORO, N. C.


-


Miscellaneous Directory 1951- 1952


Containing Valuable Information Concerning United States and State Government.


UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT


Harry S. Truman-President


Alben W. Barkley-Vice-President


The Cabinet


Dean Acheson, Secretary of State John W Snyder, Secretary of the Treasury J. Howard McGrath, Attorney General Robt. A. Lovett, Secretary of Defense Oscar L. Chapman, Secretary of the Interior Chas. F. Brannan, Secretary of Agriculture Chas. Sawyer, Secretary of Commerce Jesse M. Donaldson, Postmaster General Maurice J. Tobin, Secretary of Labor


Government Officials


Treasurer of the United States-Georgia N. Clark


Comptroller of Currency-Preston Delano


Director of the Mint-Nellie Taylor Ross Register the Treasury - Edward G. Dolan


Director of the Bureau of Printing and En- graving-Alvin W Hall


Assistant Secretary of Labor - Edw. C. Moran, Jr.


Chief of Staff United States Army-Gen. Jos. L. Collins


Navy ChiefAdmiral Wm. W. Fechteler Air Chief -- Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg Chief of the Weather Bureau-Francis W. Richelderfer


Director of War Mobilization - Jno W. Snyder


Representative World Security League - Warren R. Austin


NORTH CAROLINA GOVERNMENT


W. Kerr Scott-Governor H. Pat Taylor- Lieutenant-Governor


Thad Eure-Secretary of State Henry L. Bridges-Auditor


Brandon P. Hodges-Treasurer Clyde A. Erwin-Supt. of Public Instruction L. Y. Ballentine-Comr. of Agriculture Forrest H. Shuford-Comr. of Labor Waldo C. Cheek-Comr. of Insurance Harry McMullan-Attorney General


Supreme Court


Wm. A. Devin-Chief Justice


Associate Justices-Michael Schenck, I. T. Valentine, J. W. Winborne, M. V. Barn- hill, Jeff D. Johnson, Jr., E. B. Denney, A. J. Newton, Clerk


North Carolina Senators-Clyde R. Hoey and Willis Smith


North Carolina Representatives-Herbert Bonner, John H. Kerr, Graham A. Barden, Harold W. Cooley, Thurmond Chatham, Robt. L. Doughton, Ertel Carlyle, Wood- row Jones, Carl T. Durham, C. B. Deane, Hamilton C. Jones and Monroe M. Red- den


State Medical Commission


Jas A Clerk, Dr. Clarence Poe, F. J. Blythe, B. E. Jordan, J. W. Beam, Rev. C. E. Rozelle, Don S.Elias, Mrs. R. J. Reynolds, Jr., Wm. B. Rodman, Wm. Rich.


17


CLASSIFIED BUYERS' GUIDE


MILLER'S CLASSIFIED BUYERS' GUIDE


OF THE CITY OF


ASHEBORO, N. C. 1951-1952


The Buyers' Guide contains the advertisements and business cards of the more progressive business men and firms in the city, classified according to lines of business.


SOUTHERN DIRECTORY CO. PUBLISHERS OF QUALITY DIRECTORIES "SINCE 1905" Asheville, North Carolina


18


CLASSIFIED BUYERS' GUIDE


AUTO PARTS


Brown's Auto Supply Co.


WHOLESALE AND RETAIL AUTO PARTS AND EQUIPMENT "Complete Machine Shop Service" 136 N. FAYETTEVILLE ST.


PHONE 2191


AUTO SERVICE


CITY AUTO SERVICE ALEX S. HOLT


"We Repair Any Make Car or Truck"


360 S. Fayetteville St. Phone 2171


FAGGE'S


Esso DEALEN


SERVICE


STANDARD PETROLEUM PRODUCTS ATLAS TIRES - BATTERIES - ACCESSORIES "ROAD SERVICE" 421 S. FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE 2018


JAY'S


TEXACO


T


SERVICE STATION JOHN H. BUNTING, JR., Owner


TEXACO PRODUCTS


Tires - Batteries - Auto Accessories


362 S. Fayetteville St. Phone 9061


19


CLASSIFIED BUYERS' GUIDE


AUTO SERVICE


NORTH SIDE


"STANDARD" Esso DEALER




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.