Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / May 29, 1952, edition 1 / Page 14
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er wei'e groa tit eta, ls w ed like I d hurt las let- n" Th na asked me if I knowcd anybody that did have any ready to sell. ,. a toia nun 1 wougm Miller"! ought be. about big enough, but he (aid he'd already got Lon 's. I tnougni on a iiiue iuusvi and.the more I thought, the more I beean to realise) that about every body I knowed had done told what they had big enough. ,. -- - , I naan'i tnougni mucu uuui chiekena a beln scarce til worm kept on talkin about the trouble be was havln a finding 'em. He talked like he hadn't never seen hirVvm it cone so fast as they did from the first to tne miaoie oi t J . wni far riverfront workers in Coaneil Bluff recently. Red Crou worker made 60,000 sandwiches during the crisis Leriod-Prt. WUIard Dickersoa and Mrs. & Balabu are shewn abote. , - period. ' ' KANSAS CITY, MO. The Im portance of bread in time of emer Kency has been pointed up sharply ! in recent weeks, Curtiss H. Scott ' of Louisville, Ky chairman of the i American Bakers Association, -declared here recently. Scott ad dressed bakers from five states I Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma. Ar kansas and Nebraska at the I Heart of America oaken conven tion. ')--- " 4- "' ' When spring floods ravaged I states in this area, workers toiling around the clock to build dikes I were served sandwiches. More ' than 60,000 sandwiches were made ' by Red Cross workers in Council z Bluffs, Iowa, alone during the peak of the flood. .-" -.' Scott pointed out that when New York City drew its plans in preparation for any possible atomic bombing, the emergency rations proposed consisted of a pound of bread per person per day. "The Bureau of Nutrition of New York City stated that bread alone would provide sufficient nu trients to guard the eitjr health for a week or more, while other food supplies were being accumu lated," Scott said. . . "Enriched white bread today is doing its full share of providing elements vital to health. The job of the baker In normal times is tremendous supplying more than 40 million loaves of bread daily. It , becomes increasingly important lit emergency situations." 4 r t ; ; ailsI gggr s y; 3 hlMUl Union -. .. V SidT SchnJ UCM ' SCRIPTURE: Kxodus 10:14; Mstttww S:S. U-l. S7-ai Mar w;a-u; DEVOTIONAL BXADmOt 1:1-10. Ephsslaag Why Purity? Lessen fer Jane 1, 1931 t k J .. . - - r . t r jlj fpy CLIMT A CONNER Wonderful Words of Life ' A Poverty Stricken Youth Turns Hymn Writer for which his royalties ran mora . the boy who had onoe been do-; J KEEPING UP Oil FARMIilG WITH UIICLE VALT What in the world happened to carry Fannie to the doctor and I II them chickens I read and heard, lowed while I was were, i a pick if. so much about two or three weeks ago? Seems like they wss run ning out of everybody's ears just a 1 few days ago, and now I hear they ain't enough to hardly go around. . I went over town last week to up a coupia bags ox cnicsen ieea. I hadn't no more than got In the store before Worth Slmma said; 'Uncle Walt, " aint your chickens about big enough to sell?' When I told him they needed about anoth- noAooooooooaoooooooooooOi '. O stut that gee wtfih good grown O fresh CLEAN clothing ytr otloek win b . O brighter, yew vacatlos! MsnsUen ... and naV he a plctara O it.tassrtnesa. ian4 oemfort in your new4ook elotheal "O vi " s . o 1 L ) i Let ns refresh your vaca- w ? tion wardrobe In time for V ' '-r the summer fun ahead. We t -mm. prolong the life of your j finest garmente . .' . stretch' your ttacattosi budget too! f o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o '6 o o IDEAL LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS "OUR TRUCKS TRAVEL ALL OVER DUPLIN" Rug & Upholstery Cleaning LMINGTON, N. C , ' O O 6 O O O O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Q o o A MONO THE NEW IDEAS that into the world with the Christian religiou Is the ideal of purity, as we understand it We ac knowledge our debt here to Juda ism, but Judaism never pushed in to all the world as Christianity did. , Christianity took over from the Old Testament and re newed with fresh emphasis an idea of which the entire ancient world knew nothing, the ideal fo purity as God's win for an of us. The Greeks and Romans admired Dr. Forsmoa vestal virgins . and , the Uke; but they looked on them as a small and special class, not Uke ordinary mortals. All peoples even the most primitive hsve some kind of sex taboos; even those that per mit adultery Impose some limita tions on it What Parity Means TRUE CHRISTIAN ides, the New Testament idea, Christ's idea, of purity means something far deeper and higher than merely not committing adultry. It means chastity in its tuU sense. , .) It 1s not the' same thing as celi bacy or not marrying. It is not the tame thing as perpetual virginity, otherwise we could never speak of a chaste wife. Put as simply as pos sible, purity in the Christian sense of the word means that sex Is al ways to be thought of in the closest connection with love and. the home. It Is net tne New Testament teaching to say that sex la bad - bb MsH. It 1a evea farther frees the Mew. T taicnt to say that , ss la geedm Itself. .Pursued for its own sake, ft de stroys the happiness of the pursuer; taken Into the atmosphere of. true krre, hound In the solemn vows of genuine marriage. It can belong In a life of real happiness and good- A Men . In 1tl a ragged little ten-year-old boy walked from bis log cabin home in the woods of Clear field County, Pennsylvania, to the neighboring town of Rome. He had brought a basket of berries to sell so that ho might add a few pen alee to those he was saving to .buy a cheap Walking the streets In search of a market for his berries, the lad heard strangely beauti ful musio. He hurried toward the house from which the enohanting sound came. It must be ,a, piano, he thought, because his mother had told him about the sound. The only Instrument he had actually heard was a flute no had whit ' tied from a eamv ? , ' " "..W Putting his basket on the steps, the boy ven tured to -the open door. When the lady saw him she abruptly stopped playing: Philip Bliss related in later life that he begged the lady to "please play some more.' Instead of being accommodated, he was ordered away and scolded for making tracks on the porch with his dusty feet - ,..f v-1 Before he died in a railroad wreck In his thirty-eighth year, Philip BUse was to write many a song that ladles would be playing on pianos tor generations. He usually wrote his own words to his melodies, most of his themes '-being taken 'from sermons. si,i-v-.. -. As editor of his highly ' popular "Gospel Bones h.n sxo.OOO. the boy ' sled the luxury of hearing a piano, wrote: Sing them over, again to me, Wonderful words of Life; "' ' Let me mors of their beauty see, Wonderful words of life. Worde of life and beauty, Teach me faith and duty; ; Beautiful words, wonderful words, Wonderful words of Life. , Christ the blessed One, gives to all . ' Wonderful words of Life. Sinner, list to the loving call, . . r Wonderful words of Life. All so freely glyen, Wooing us to Hesven; Beautiful words; wonderful words. Wonderful, words of Life. : sweetly echo the gospel call, . Wonderful words of Life; Offer pardon snd pesce to all, - Wonderful words of Life. Jesus, only 8sviour, , Sanctify forever; . Beautiful words, wonderful words, , Wonderful words of Life. 1 1 1 1 - i .. . . .' ) M Sttrlbatea bx HbutrsMl PMtvrw, Blrmlnghaia, alakaiaa. f Wayne 4-H Program Is Subject Of What factors are responsible for the. success of 4-H Club work? A study on this subject was made nuentiv in Wavne County by Miss Margaret E. Clark, .assistant 4-H Club leader for the State College Extension Service, as part of a lar ger study being conducted in 12 Southern states and Puerto Rico. She interviewed club boys and girls, neiehbarhood leaders, former mem bers, high school principals, and businessmen and county leaders in all townships of the county. Most frequent comment heard by Miss Clark was: "It seems as if the whole county is for 4-H Club work.'' . Other findings were: . Parental interest In and support of children in 4-H activities has spurred members on to greates achievements. ( : Local adult leadeshlp has been emphasized over a long period of years.".-;-'' i-.- " : :'- -; " The county council is the nu cleus of the county 4-H program. Recognition given when deserv ed has stimulated vigorous 4-H activity , among leader, members, and parents. The club program through the years has incluled a wide variety of activities. ., . , V : The club member's ability to sel eit a projert that appealed to him and to auccesafully conduct the selected project was recognized as a vital factor in the club member's success. . Special projects on which clubs worked together seemed to have Strengthened the ciuds. . i May. Take me,' he said, '1 sow over 75,000 broilers them two weeks and what I mean I had to sell a lot nf them below what it cost to grow them out. Now, prices are up right smart and I can't find but a few small flocks big enough to sell.' ' He said ha heard a report over his radio the other night by Ralph- Kelly sayin that he figured over two million broilers had been sold bv us farmers durin them first two weeks in May. He went on to say that this feller Kelly who works on Poultry marketln with the De partment of Agriculture had been one of the leaders in aeipsn tne farmers sit rid of all them chick-l est that was oeginmn to oacx-up on 'em. And the way worth give it in. he did a bang up lob of it. I reckon he did at that, 'cause they don't seem to be very many of 'em left around my neck of the wood. So I asked Worth If he thought that Mies pushln that Kelly and them other fellers did was sorts backfirin.on the .'poultry raisers. He was quick to say that he sure didn't because if something hadnt been done, we'd stUl be overrun with chicKens ana a lot oi me grow ers would be losln more than they did. As it turned out, he said some of the growers were able to sell without login very much. But if this thing had a kept on, he talked like it .would jeally Jnave been a mess. . f -Xook at 'it this way, Uncle Walt,' he said, 'Suppose everybody'd just set still tod not done nothin about gettin rid of all them chickens when many of them had already got big gent what most of. the processors . wrkw tt mm, umii fit ni growers would have gone out to our broilers houses and found eggs en the floor before we could of sold market. : 'I reckon some of the growers are a little peeved about the way sales v were beln pushed and the way prices were comin off, but if they'd stop to think that it was those very things that corrected the situation, tneya xeei migniy gyuu about it a oein over 4 , I thouahf Worth had sorta chang ed his mind about the whole thing (mm the way he started off talkin. So I said to him, 'You mean to tell me that you're here tryln hard as vou can to buy chickens but still you're glad they were able to sell so many ox 'em last wees ana tne week before?' ' 1 sure am.' he said. The prices have already gone up since they cleared out mat xuuiea mantel ana you just name me one grower whd ain't always giaa to see paces go up for the stuff he grows.' He had me stumped there and I told him he did. So I go my feed. went by and picked up Fannie and' them. I know some of us lost money i told her that it looked . like we when the prices got so low, but wel was gonna git a pretty good price couldn't expect nothin else not with for that bunch of chickens we had. wai raaujr vuiu&cub i vujr aw uig 4O0060000OOO0O00000OOOOOG THE DUPLIN TIMES published each Thursday In Keaansrille, N. DUPLIN COUNTY C County Seat of Editorial, business office and printing plsat, KenansvlBe, N C : J. ROBERT GRADY, EDITOR OWNER Entered At The Pest Office, KenansvUle, N. C as second class Butter. , TELEPHONE KenansvlUe, Day 2554 Night tIS-1 ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $J. per year la Duplin, Lenoir, ones, Onslow, Pender, Samseea and Wayne counties; ' $4.0 per year eatside this area In North Carolina; and I5.M per year elsewhere. ;- K-''C;-'v.'' '!'V"X"V'':,S'.,,1..!;' Advertising rate tarnished on raraest A r ".n Coanty JeurnaL devoted to the religlew, material, e?-n-i! sl r--",-al development of Dssslla forsaking All Others CHRIST QUITE CLEARLY taught Vas the Ideal of marriage a life time unbroken union of one man and one woman. Sine the times In which he lived were, like ourr, a time of easy divorce, his disciples. good men though they were, felt mizzled about this. , ' Today on all sides the Christian ideal of marriage is stUl under at tack as too rigid, as beyond the ca pacity of normal human beings, as being a sort of cage invented by priests and preachers. Love should be free, we. are told. , J:i " Ten do not need to go te the Bible to see how wrong this Is. . Jnst fan in tare and you. will ; understand the truth. When - man and woinjta are In love, ; really m Iove enough to dare marrlace together, they.de not need a priest or a preacher or .,. " a Bible to ten them what Qd who made them has already pat Into their hearts: that true love means Just each for the other for always.-j - k:fifz' What young man would care to marry a girl who ' would say to him on their wedding- day, "Dar ling, you are the only man. I love with maybe half a dozen- excep tions." What girl would feel Uke going on with the ceremony If at the altar the young man sMA '! take thee forWwiawfieTfrom this day forward, for better not for cher not for poorer, in health but not in sickness, 'tin dis content oo us part.;- ... i , , The Ilower-tn4ower notion of love la something every couple truly in and worse. this oar foi Worse, for" love can see Is nonsense, ifearTef the Home r" I ; p: If 1 ' . 7 m w 'j ' m .. . t. : " As I rode back to KenansvUle from Raleigh at 6 a m. last weeltl wislwrrtt James Russell' LoweU would have changed -STmomi to Say had he been here, June in taUke May here the fields seem to grow as you look at them ZnL Tartot of color as you ride along-some yellow iJS all along the road-it looked; i ' "7" JZi. Th?al7 is frSh and sweet at that hour in the Znd somehow it always gives , you such a righteous ' From Abroad,' ' ' Oh, to OS in .ngian - ' ' Now that April's there, .. ; i " , ; And Whoever wakes in England Sees, some morning, unaware, ' ' , " . ' . ..That the lowest boughs and the brush-wood sheaf " Round the elm-tree bole are in tiny leaf, ' While the chaffinch singe on the orchard bough 1 In England now! ' ,. - . , T ,, " Nostalgia, homesickness, yearning for familiar places is . universal feeling, I expect Each time we go away even for hort X we are not uite the same people we. were when we left- , we have Krown a litUe, seen new things, met new people.who. ' Zv?2S$ even u'almost imperceptibly. Mayb-part of ttat feVungis a wish that time could stop in its tracks-or Jhatit couldVbepushed back a little. One of the lssons tht life SaTto tesch u. though is that we must always goon e Point . where we are t any given momenta JeJ Chat we were a week ago, a year ago. nor can . .f hills of home the people we were when Ifft-the f things have changed with us-the trees have aown-nd Uller. too. ; We would be much happier it we would accept the fact that life moves on, and move with H.. not live in regret for time. While I was away, I met some people I liked, too people' who were kind which means to me doing something above and be yond the call of duty. Two of them helped me when it could not i v. ..ntthiv evnected of . them-i-one was a Mrs. -M. !. Waters who is the swing operator in the Atlantic Coastline Station in Warsaw and Bhe other was Mr. M. L. Martin who Is section fore man of the A.C.1V K you take a train trip soon, Ido uKest ttat you take advantage of the excellent service of the AC J from Warsaw I slept In luxurious comfort and that demitasse of black: coffee they give you to sustain you until breakfast is a really civilized way to begin day , 111 TJew Orleans they d o t too -they drink coffee as I do at the least excuse and they call it petit nolr ehortened to something .that sounds llke; nois. ... t The poll Is progressing at great pace and maybe by next week we can see some trends that would give an indication of that elusive quality the gals most want to find. The one so far mos desirable is thoughtfulness. Some of the gals have written me telling me things they do NOT like in a man, too you'd be sur prised, boys, at how much they dislike conceit in you. Joseph) Gaucher says In the Statevepost that a man who is conceited enough 4o think he's great gift to women may find -hhnself;. , exchanged, v (-.:. s-'i.- y'K : s ;:;, ?- -I ... " ' ' -1-.- . .i.y-V- : h t Manyyears ago I met at a dinner given by that wonderful person, Ellin Berlin, very remarkable , woman whose husband was one of the most charming people I have ever met 1 wan delighted ' to fUid a posthumous book of Alice Duer Miller's poetry In the library in KenansvUle. She wrote The White Cliffs and Forsaking All Others, two narrative poems as well as 'Come Out of The Kitchen, her first novel which later became a play and amusical comedy and a movie. Best known is her Gowns by Roberta which was a smash hit as the musical Roberta and wUl be the M.G.M. starred movie for this summer called I "believe. Lovely To Look At' Some of the poems are musing, some satirical, some serious. That elusive quality that seems ' most desired in t, man could be called gentleness, too and she has something to say about it in her poem called An Exhortation to Gentleness, , Tou who are strong, and do not know the need V That weaker spirits feel, hut do not plead y The need to lean en someone who is strong a ; v . Be sot so busy with your own career,. However noble, that you cannot hear The sighs of those who look to you for help -' , For this is purchaslag success too dear. t, J bad grand time at the News and Observer the other night watching them get the paper out and talking to my friends, Sam Began and Jim Whitfield. Sam told me that he, too, enjoys writing his column, and has the. same trouble that I do finding time how well I know what he means. You do a paragraph today end f as you are starting the second one, you are called away on a story and when you are back again, the mood and the theme have gone 4he continuity is hard to -achieve. Sam had written to me , , regarding - 'Cynara' that he agreed with my estimate of the t Dowson poem. Too long to quote here Is my favorite poem by Stephen Spender, onev of the best of our contemporary poets and a good novelist, to, but part of it I would like to share withi . you. It's called 'I Think of Those Who Were Continually Great What is precious Is never to forget - -The, essential delight of the. blood drawn from ageless springs Breaking through rocks in world before our earth. . v v : 1 Never to deny its pleasure In the morning simple light j ' . ' Nor its grave evening demand for love. . :v f I Never to allow gradually the traffic to smother""" ': n .With noise and the fog the flowering of the spirit. PREACHERS HAVE BEEN say- tag for a long time, but now they -don't need to say it any more for a while, because scientific investi gators, sociologists, psychiatrists, probation officers, juvenile , court judges, all are saying the same thing: X is the home that makes, or unmakes, the boy and glrL 'juvenile delinquents, w' are told by these who know, eeme frena all sorts f hemeav hat set . from homes where She asreot v Hve la harmony. ., . So It Is not only for one's own sake that purity is an Meal to be cherished and lived out It is for tne sake of the riatng generation, it is for the whole community' sake. Do you want to know whether the next generation wUl be strong and good or weak and bad? Look into the homes where saey sae now growing up. The homes of today tell the story of the- characters of tomorrow. And nothlrg - cuts jut the l1 cf a home so c no " t ' t !" i f . a r ('TfirrW 7. ... ' We're Having a Milk Drinking Festival And everyone's invited to join our ever so healthy, ' ever so delicious rnQk jamboree. Drink it plain and -enjoy every drop of its creamy, taste-temptinsf good- ; ness. Try it as an exciting party treat ... as a milk '; shake, float or a malted. Or make it a memorable ' : custard or pudding dessert Then see how you make our party a happy habit . . . it's so healthful to drink " nLlk. ' ' - ' , . ' , VE3ITE ICE ;CnEAM Near the snow, hear the sun,, in the highest fields . See how these names are feted by the waving grass. The names of those who in their Uves fought for life Who wore at their hearts the fire's center, Bora of the sun they travelled a short while towards the sum. And left the vivid air signed with their honor. Helen Caldwell Cushmant I' Vet Or Dry Many who failed te heed the advice to 'Save for a rally day" now reoegnise the wisdom of laying s part of their earnings aside for s Dry Season.' v -' The wise man builds a substantial bank balance by saving a ! ' j " '; . ..'-----;-.',. , ......... ... certain sum at regular intervals. . "Make Our Bank Your Dank" 7f II l"s ' ( Blount OSve . 'i; Calypso
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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May 29, 1952, edition 1
14
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