Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Sept. 30, 1937, edition 1 / Page 7
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lit i: J. A. Hi" 1 i t Vtt "WW" "T ? i " . VYTIPIW 4 CAI2IS1 Eto. 1ES 3 2 YCHfo ESS3S3 tit ... .... V, 4 7 ItSilll i 1 t til 7 end " s V arr.aw 1 Ci ;re c uct i ft S:CDJ Z. " A. CttU.O, a I 11 to r:st ia j near tie . 1 cf friends .12 ly her t, L XL and , I -tLe r dl sisters: j ci r'satcm; LM- , , l:ro, and : 1 i. lawtoa Eum- i. tv-srjp Lose, of . - - - Ji . J listen, Hv Cj lab r. f idiv 0f near War i&w, flcl it 1 j l;ae at Carlton's Cro- Ir V.e:x7f - Kramoer M "-.- rT-'!,-r"d Einess. .-.. . - T . fasrl vrvfcra vera consuoted iTtir:'T Essrair, tad Interment .'pa AMnfttarv. 1. 1 ,1 PAY YOUR TA3ES Cno md Cr.s-Hril Per Cent Dh cc::nt VO AI!sv;cJ cn Ail 1937 Tcrics Pdd cn cr Ccfcrc October ?, 1C37. OrJy 1 per cent Discount V.TJ ba ACpvcd plhiL: cf October. Pay ycur Toxca Today j ,; L.N. KZT3ZPJE:0N, -2 ; v Tax.CcIIcctcr,-;''- J T tL. Two L. ei ia t' s ti a . i. 3 Jul- aw; 1 :j e -1ei ly lis C ar . .... . , v u ' 1 1 ....-J, and -. tf. rjsciull; I. C. I rrl'.t and Roosevelt Newlywcds Like thef Sua .'.1 cf Esn-'s-" rs arvive: , anl Jonas 4.x -vers con2uc ..'y Eiornli'? tt 10:13 oV tj Lot. 7. P. IL Carrie, of ." "acef agisted by r.ev. r. L. Cos .n,. of Eenans- hrs wili tit,r-;zi la tio Smit. Ceaaetery near Lis home." -, LUCY FSALSALL ATESTSOIT W T.i. muTl - AtkiniAn c't! at the homcf Kr. and lrs. Llzt EMbLlar near Kenans Tille Thursday E-iernoon. at 7 KM) after- a liiigerir Clnew.' Before marriage she wab.LIiss Lucy Stok es aanng- marrja urst lunry She was born irn3i. 15, 1ZZ0. - Sue was a memuer oi xne &en uiaf!1n WpthoJi:l Church, 'and was a' beautiful ysoul. All who knew her loved l i, Even in time of illness she canned the smile of victory, sue naa i no cnuaren oi her own.' and 1c t no near rela- hut she had a ho Jt of friends. Puneral service! were conduct- the home of ISr. trickland, and interment was mane in the local cemetery by the crave of her first Ihuiband., , s "H A - " ,' J .1 I JWa I l. c J t 1113. Tciritt t. C; fee sisters, . i ; r .r cf I 3W Ijrn, r. n Y rcf I .L2L and ). 1. S. 1.; r cf .son. Two 1 "' . i tl a survive. IJT xers at tie f jacral were F. 'A. EwLkson, Wesley Javen- bto-k, V7. A. Irown, J. B. Xorne, W, T, Lanier, and Curtis Eobin son, - ' '. j . :runrY (st&yetesz taylou ' TiPitY! Chrvstsne Tavlor nassed away at tne Home oi ner puenw, i?t. .ia Ca lAurlitie J. Taylor, on Wednesday, September 15, at 2 o'clock.- ' - ' i She funeral was held Thursday September 15, at S o'oiock, v. TJavd Vernon, condnctine the ser vices. Interment was in the fam- ii mmetarv near juonianos. . . She is survtvea Dy ner lamer ana mother. Kr. and Mrs. Laueh- tie 7. Taylor, and three older sis ters, Audrey Louise, vynuua nar- le, and Joanna bob. en Spirits of Any Family JUDDEE KEEBITT ' u .Tniiiml v MrvwM'tifAr ! Inddie Kerritt, 64, who djed at his home in Bosenui, Heptmenr : iv, . were mnaliutA Snndav Afternoon by Mi Hbv T f! VsJmnn. mutor. of WWW WU' - i it w y j w- the Bosehill Methodist Church, in terment was in tne. uavenaugn fmptprv iMt Wallace. ' 1 As a member of the, . Methodist Church, the deceased was a high ly esteemed citizen u uosemu ana had . host of friends. Tor ' some time' nrior to hia death he had offered with heart trouble and his death , was not Wxpected. ' . - 1 . J.v.v...v.vya: .v.-iojav. AivwwuMaamMMmfl n i r it n- mini linn r n i nart . Mr. Henrv is an authority on I transportation. His . dispassionate , remarks on tnu snoject are uicic fore worthy of serious considerat ion. ' ' . r ' . . 'Trimative agriculture ; can get along without organized transpor tation MndVrn agriculture how- fever, with its great capacity to Imand for a way to the markeU ; 'of the world, finds'organized tran-a sporattion as essential .a part of its operations as the land itself, lor the seasons. - J ,' ', I ; The service which modern Am , erican agriculture demands must , be continent-wide. It must be de ipendable, operating in all seasons and in all weathers. It must be' adaptable to the needs of the com merce it is to carry on. It must be stable, to avoid disastrous al Itemations of glut and scarcity in lV. -1ra Tf nliaraM must J published and known.: Its costs must be as low as ingenuity and - . ... . . . imnroved nlant and tools can a .1 . 11 .U. T.U DMiim am MtjM Khmm. 1 TUHKC IBC pictured as they enjoyed th sun on the Italian Riviera as they honey mooned in Europe. The young Couple expect to return to the United States in the fall: r v huiIca tlean. Obviously, no one form of tran KTinrt is best in all these particu- ' lars. All are striving to do the best I work they can, at the lowest cost i '.t..,il,, e . - wink uiej v Robert Ballard Is Soapbox Derby Champ 1 JJh ta its field ito CCOCOOCOCCOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0I . .. . i ' ' .. ,,. "." ". . . ..V 'i.' . . ' .' ..'i':' I ..''."l. "Dim ma a. nur with a ; color liVA mashed sweet Tjotatoesyou know we have boys in the hone." I " That was statement Hiss Fan line Gordon, of State College, heard a .friend make to salesman wnue buying a Tug for the dining room. ; Whv should we ' continue to live with the tame old dreary things just because our forgears At At" Viaa OAln1i.1l dlVsd. :-"If I were asked to name one fault most of us have ' in home inrnishinss. it would be sad col-; ors what we call useful shades that will not show stain or soil easily." v 1 Kr.' and lbs. Tom CcrnwelL of Cleveland County, ! realised that (Amathinir WM VW1W With their j living-room, crowded with the ac cumulations oi lue-ume, x So they called in their, county home demonstration agent and dmstLs ch&nsres :' . ' Dowi came the crayon portraits and fluttering brio-a-brac. out went the dreary linoleum, In their ataaJI rnnrm, nlnced tWO ITOOd PIC- the mantel audi '4i B m Wf.! 1 I f 1 ".l1, ' . 1 ... a vi.it . l. jm nrfiitA DT.fn. M v :' amllAa hp rtMim aooeri uwut u. ifww -., - the International Soapbox Derby championship trophy from Felix Dqran, an Official of the race. The contest, held at Akron, Ohio, was attended by a record crowd of more than 100,000. A handsome cash prize and a scholar ship to college when he is old enough were the rewards for Robert's skill ia piloting his soapbox vehicle. a t.j W. "M. Holt has been sick rec- - 8 ?.saisrii SSS -iSttsm. nO OnC 'MMFILgult vvw.1 J utoUJ 0 tucuua, mm. w. Tiu aT fTjrniture until it y Smith awhile Snndav had been refinished-" ' Kiss Annie Kaxwell and broth- WiiTrow. dark drapes were re- r. Warren Kaxwell and little mmrMl from the windows so the THE SlLE OU H AVE BEEN Ml . V .ni.o-M AMild flood ' fhe room. Furniture was placed for harmony ai luiaiiiw ana cneenui bvium were introduced. - ; t Twelve big hooks for coats and hats were removed from the front hall where they, together with the array of hats and coats, had been an eye-sore for years. - " ikvm Anmt onrrit ta see the dif- ferenoe," Juu uoraan auuucu. : xne xrucn nas muwuim a J element of mobility and ilexum- , :ity into transportation but it on; " lid hot be relied on for the com Iplete movement of some great crop let us say, and even 11 sucn a mov ement could be accompoiisnea us necessary cost would be prohibi tive. f Sn the railroad train running m tranlra has its limitation. It is jnot so flexible for small loads as for specialized cargo lots of ten 'thousand tons as the ship which uses natural deep water channels. I But it is, and so far as any can I see now, will continue to be the i basic essential transportation of this continent. Because it could go places where boats could not pen etrate, it made possible the settle-m-nt. and civilization of this con tinent, the first in history to be a. . i. A. developed away irom tne water courses. Because of its unique com bination of the flexibility of the seperately-loaded individual car with the economy of mass trans portation in trains, it has made possible the development ol a nation-wide commerce and of large- scale agriculture in America. Because of that combination, railroads are able to transport the major commerce of this continent for a revenue wnicn avenges less than one cent for moving a ton one mile, and that average includ es every sort of Ireignt, movea oe tween all stations, over all distan ces, in all seasons and all weath ers. The rates paid, moreover, in clude all the costs of the service rendered, the cost of providing ray as moving CHOCOLATE J f . IVAITiilG FOR 4 H-ilrccb cf ItcnM at Unbeliev- xb!o Price?, J I ' r;. , Cc.r.2 end ceo f cr ycuree!! thi'y, in v o ; -' , : Stee.1 vn fcr u:o Yccjr. t - X c -V I' It's VcrCi.A SeeieJ Trip t6 Steri S' c Pelbam Sutton is still traveling with the Lord xuvert voiiee com pany. He visited his mother rec y' and maintaining the roadway TT I. vnn.ll Ti- if troiroliaoi .. .. . ... . 1.1.. . &uu well as tne cost OI moving me ve for ,The Duplin Times, and when payment of real tax- we read his column, "To Be-Lieve M WT taxes which farmers Wht 'Ro-T.ietre " TOP -itftilille - ' 1 J i.wvmii4-it that "Hughie" hag lots of thrill- to jaaintain schools, improve roads IVIfV AYTIAI-iATlPpa 1 T A J f. .....1. TTlof if . Eommie L. Holt writes his o- uti01l!, support government in ther, Krs. Habel M. Holt, that the Knejt weather is getting a little cnyiy- , is not only because up in Chicago. He spent the Labor 1 of the nnique surf ace which the Day holiday with a boy friend ml afford, but las because of a rinnlnnati fiVlin TTp thinks it nicft J .x J .f. hnnm.. .mvwmv., - : ion? anu bicimiv iwij vl ........ .. J'..... f3;.' - , " "' ' ' v .V. ' . m.m 4t iimt missed the mail i. v ThBt ia the reason I . naa from ChOOOlate. v jar. lioramer ssawou " L. Qrady made a trip to Wilson 1 -Thursday to tee mr. . w. liaxwell who is xteuperaung Krs. W. S. uooaing naa u fortune of falling out of the door af her home last iTesaay noon. She feared for ft while that there might be same broken bones, but found it was only bruises, and later in the evening the made a meetine of .the OXS. with some of her friends, Krs. H. u. max- wafHa Braimnns and son, Garland, visited in the home of E. mww-f' ' . . rariand and tome oi nu saiior i .. - ....... . daughter, Joyce, visited tneir iat w ami . erandfather. Mr. B. .G. Kaxwell at Wilson Saturday after-, noon. Kiss Kaxwell spent tne nig- lit and Snndav ; there.. She is a member at the faculty at the Out law's Bchoolhouse near ner nome. , wr niilie Cook Korneeav had a tobacco tieing Saturday night. Quite a crowd enjoyea tne occas nn anil the mnuo too. Kr. James IKiH Oradv. Mrs. Celia Sutton and 1 1 v. ITa wam BtnAnir minrnwr. umi ALU rvv . "-. ....... ... -- . iiiiiir 'those Present. '' v uivnB.cn ui u. Bent ffi memous; vi I . . aw J I TrT laT -.11 a.mJI 1 ril a Ii I . ai .. Kr. John William wooing anut warreu tuwcu buu uvtwi i growing investment in . puxung Kr Joe Johnson made a Dusiness m. maxweu, oi ocven opu.sa, trin to Goldsboro last Thursday, 'ited B. Gt Maxwell at Carolina Kr Karvin v Bimmons naa iwciueuerai jausuu u. """" tw wi4.fArtnTia of .11013116? a fork in day afternoon and carried him his knee last Kondty while hauling some df the famous Seven Springs better tools in the hads of rail road workres so that the job may be done better and better, at less and less real cost. Ian hainiiiff hav. It was very pain ful for ft while. Krs. Simmons ft very good nurse, and after ap plying hot clothes. and liniments for a while ne iinaiiy gov icuc., ..4 i. vallriTie) olnCTlt UOW. , Mr. Hildreth Kornegay ana sis ter, Alda, visited Krs. CheHie Max well for a while Sunday nignj. :. Kr. Kagnus Outlaws conoiuon continues to be about the samejHe t. A.f;iut thn lied athis home. Mi Wl K-. -T . - . Kr. W. B. Gooding, nr. Aivin Kornegayi Kr.' Jerry Smith visited w. r a Wan mil at the hospital in Wilson Sunday, his condition is much improved and ne nopes to be able to use a pair of nice crutches - that Judge - Henry A. liMm Visa m-AaantAA tO nilD. ""V. Dr. Jim Grady "?: www watpr. Kr..and Mrs. H. D. Maxwell and familii THoitml their danchter. Bu- by Mae, af James Walker Hospital I in Wilmington recently, where I she is taking nurses' training. Transportation FARMER'S SEAL INTEREST BY GUY A. CAUWUj afew we all. taow 'has been ill-and XUU.ua - - ... I , : . .1:11. (In. i,f,thl . ... -nA after a. visn wnn'snenos pari. i .;.m "v "rr u..; v r .i si :l t-U aai friends, wClgoto rnlZ)t vereke vrZl be in school r tlx r r atis. Cood luclt, ana t..t ' nr "silor boVS." - 'tjs moved in their I " I tear tame, "The Chellies . i - a lasfweek on 'a . 1. I .-. will serve 'a cf ills community. He I a convention in Chic- ' " " T-r.h of Pink Kill t ' r "'roster, were i T 3"r. and Sirs 't. - vamUot . WilMn Hfiii the fat UUOUlW-a aaa 11 ' . ih of Senator Paul Grady of Hen - ' .Am . ..n wa k i. i;neiner jmwww Was the dinner guest ot her dau ghter, Krs. HBgnus uuuaw - 1LJ-J . nna of Paul Jtvra s , cnuuu ... T,itt liv a. white oak snake a i.sa liAma Rnndav. v They ' took 41.A a1iM n thm doctor.: a nnna con of Kb and NUTS fw. riyn.4 af near K. B. Holt's staie had the misfortune- to rget I 's brclsn recently, it teems - r r I - a bv Till Sutton raK TIia fnllnwini? address delivered bv Bobert S. Eeiry of the Associ- atiAii , Af American - Railroads, Washington, D. C, at the Vast meetinjr of the Association of Sou thern Agricultural ; Workers,sh- ould impress readers of these .art iAiaa nitii tVia eiweiitial nart 4hat 1U1VB .w r . A i tnnsnortation nlays in. the nre- 7'. .i- ' T. -x sent ' day woria oi lousiness, oi whwh agriculture; i' an' important CLASSIFIED TIKES Want Ads sire read ev ery week by hundreds of people in Duplin County. Xail or bring your ad.' Count the words and bring one' cent for each word, cash of stamps. Ho 'Want Sfcds taken for less than 25 cents. No Want Ads. charged. Mercantile Ads not taken under this head- FOR BAPE, Vetch, Clover and Winter Peas.. See: w. E. BELANGA ' f . ' '' Henansville. H. C. 10-7 4t WILLARD WESTBROOK Hi-way- II .Hear B. F. Grady School att Ws trt Cll'RATil. SOFT DRINKS & SMOKES-t-' ,-aj,k .-a- .'m-v ft'v, c , ... " . , , i, 4. 4- ;Heavr & I"hcy Groceries-Ml .-..;,.,:. "; -T?!J2 irr-k i ArrincriTrD - ; w 8 try. It was very unTr-
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 30, 1937, edition 1
7
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