Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / June 23, 1955, edition 1 / Page 12
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"...cc2v-:Kill.'News P:::::.:!s Mr. and Mm. Wayne Jones and daughter,. Deborah ot Memphis, Tennessee, visited Mr. and Mrs. Ro bert Herring last Monday. Mr. and M E W Bamaey ot Petersburg, Va., are spending eev- .l with Mf and Un Tl -W. Kamsey and Mrs. D. D. Bamsey. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dail and chil dren attended the State Agricultural convention at Carolina Beach last Mr. and Mrs. Robert Herring and Peggy Ann spent, test week end with Mr. and Mrs. U B. Hood at Charlotte. !-m..-'-v. 's - ' Mrs. O. H. James visited Mr. and Mrs. C T. Pullen In Burgaw last week end. - , v .-,"": Mr. and Mr A. J. Wells and boys of Bay Village, Ohio, were Thursday might supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wells. v ,.:'"'.' Mr. and Mrs. Reesie Qulnn and 1 familv of Pink Hill spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dewitt Locker- man. Major and Mrs. E. A. Sweeney and Barbara of Ft Belvoir, Va., are spending his thirty days leave with Mrs. Sweeney's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Vann Jones, before leaving for : Germany where they will spend three years. ' ' Mrs. T. I. Neal and daughter. Jan Ice of Richmond, Va, spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Tea ehey. - , Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Price and chil dren spent last week end with Mr. and Mrs John Price at Monroe. Charles Pumroy of Norfolk, Va, spent the week end here with his wife, Mrs. Pumroy. (Mrs. Bertis Scott and children, Mrs. C. L. Faircloth, Jr., and chil dren spent Tuesday in Wilming ton. Mr. and Mrs. May Wells had as their guests during the week, their children and families; Mr. ana Mrs. i French Wells and daughter, ofi Greensboro, . Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Wells and boys, of Bay Village, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. L B. Wells and family of Dover. Del.. Harold and Ethan Wells of Washington, D. C. and Miss Mary Wells of Greenville. Jimmy Blanchard had as his guest last week, Arthur Cavanaugh of Clayton. Miss Jane Lathan of New Bern is spending several days this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Lathan. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Horace Ward and children Suzan and Alfred, Mrs. D. B. Herring and Ann Saunders spent Wednesday at Wrightsville Beach and Wilmington. I Mrs. Doane Fussell spent several days last week with her parents, 1 Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Owen at Dunn. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Wells and fam ily of Dover, Del. visited Mr., and Mrs. Eugene Wells on Monday. Mr. G. C. Pate, Jr., spent the week end with his family at Fay etteviUe. Mrs. Byron Teachey, Mrs. Ben TURNER TRACTOR Kinston. N. C. ARE FOR THOUSANDS OF fill fr$ i CURE-ALLS -USE LESS OIL NO OIL VAfdRi Oft SM6kt ARE RELEASED IN THE BARN TO SMUDGE YOUR TOBACCO. NO TAGS ARE TURNED ON TOBACCO CURED WITH A CURE-ALL Cure-All exceflt became of Hs oient j.j.. i j :il u.. n" j:. nvsf j uuiy ttwm wi a win, i iiv v r- merer ourer drcuwror ana eiuminum fisted steel host chamber. Ih pat ented Twin Btstst Burner is to clean burning, you'll seldom tee smoke. So efficient in heet saving,, the smoke pipes run cool, needs no screening. You clean it by twist of the wrist after each cure. BjiH like high priced furnace with exclusive giant heat laving sir circulating outer drum. , No wicks to trim or replace. H eaten built over modern equipment with - .securely locked edges, bound to give maximum service. ONLY CURE-ALL HAS A SINGLE CONTROL ASSEMBLY DESIGNED ESPECIALLY FOR A TOBACCO COOKER. Don't be satitTied with make-shift controls that wore built for some entirely different hosting job. The tingle CURE-ALL valve operating l four stoves stturet you more dependable performance end much 'simpler hook-up. r The Mst whs im CURE-ALLS fal yos they ate less A east lets to maintain emd earn you better pries for your leaf. Mr. T. 6. McUmb, lemon, i North CaroCoa writes: ' r' ' .1 bwignt my first set of CURE ALLS beek Is I WO. I hevn't eve ; ' ' 1 bought a replacement part far these cookers and they ere is ' eerfect eondirlo today! They are light en oil end te ttmpte sf : school shild can operate them. I wouldn't trade this set I hsv . Frederick, Mrs. Robert Frederick . .hiMnn Cnnnie and Jackie. and Mrs, Fess Mitchner and Mrs. John Vincent of Warsaw spent sev eral days last week at Kure's beech. Mr. I U Morgan of Raleigh spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. (Byron Teachey and Mr. Willis Fussell .- Miss Mary Ann Teecbey end Miss Annie Mae Brown are spending this week st Kure's Beach. ' Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Farrior en tertained at a dinner party at their home last Thursday evening. Guests ere Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Rouse and children, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Teachey, and Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. W. I Rouse, all of Rose Hill and Al fred Teachey of Wilmington. ' Mrs. Ben Frederick left Sunday for Salt Lick, Ky, where she will spend several weeks with her moth er .Mrs. Sula Jones. Mrs. Samuel Johnson, of Raleigh Is spending a few days with her parents, Mr. ana mra. than. Mr. arid Mrs. Horace Fussell, Gwen, William David and Libby spent Friday in Wilmington. Mrs Eugene Wells and children, Mr.-and Mrs. A J. Wells and -hP-dren, Mr. and Mrs. Julian Wells and family, Mrs. Raeford Wells and H-upht 9belhv ' Harold. nd Mary Wells spent Friday at White Lake. Mr. nd Mm. Bvron Teachey and Mr. Willie Fuwll had as their Sun day dinner guests, Mr. and Mrs. Frances Fussell and children of Clinton, Mr. and Mrs. Fess Mitch ner Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fussell and children, Jackie and Sara Alice of Warsaw and Mrs. Dora Smith of Wake Forest. Mr. and Mri. Stanley Lockerman, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rouse, and Har ry, Jr and Richnrd Rouse spent Sunday at Surf City. Mrs. R. H. Home visited her dnughter. Miss Madeline Home in Favetteville last week. --j William R Teaeh- par. miv ..no. -- -- ey and Billy, of ECC, Greenville spent the week end here at their home. Mr. and Mrs. Pasley Rouse, Mis. Garland Scott d r.nt"'. "h ed Thursday at Masonboro Sound. Mrs George Carr and children, Valeria, Jerry Patterson and Va leria are spending this week at Ca rolina Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Garland Scott nad ns their week end guests, Mr. and Mrs. Carol Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Blankenship. of Franklin, Va., Mr. end Mrs. A. K. May of Seaboard and Fickie Scott of Camp Lejeune. Mrs. Helen Stucky spent Sunday with Mrs. David Sanderson. Rnnlrpr of Rockv Mount was week end guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cottle. Linaa an" Ann naciciey, ouooy Lanier of Wallace, and Billy and Kay Eubanks of Wilmington, have spent the past two weeks with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes Young. Mrs. Bill Eubanks of Wil- mlnotnn Hr a thiv SVirinV CT1 1 Htl t C Mrs. Annie Scott has as her guests & IMPLEMENT CO, Phone 5291 EARNING LOTS OF $ GROWERS BECAUSE ' frl UJ . a L.r NO atu.. I F i for several days her children and their families, Mr. snd Mrs. Melvin Sloan of Winston Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Scott and family of Vienna, Va., Mr. , and Mrs. Frank Giddens of Warsaw and Sgt ant Mrs. Harold Smith of Fayetteville were Mrs. Scott's week end guests. " Mr. . and Mrt: Edgar Wilson of Hopewell, Va. spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Winifred Jerni gan."' i ",'-; Mr; snd Mrs. James Fussell and son. Jimmy of Pine Level, Mr. and Mrs. Burnard Pittman and daughter ol Sanf ord, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Shef field of Whitevllle visited Mr. snd Mrs. Donald Buckner and Mr. Geo. Fussell 6n Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Hurbert Cottle snd Pat spent Sunday with Mrs. Cottle's mother, Mrs. Robert Jackson at Beulaville. Cpl. and Mrs. Manley Sanderson spent the week end at Carolina Beach. Master Benjamin Powell HI, of Whiteville is spending this week with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Wells. Mr. and Mrs. H. R Procter and family of Wallace visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fields Sunday after noon. Mrs. Gurnie Littleton and child ren Joe and Kay, returned home Sunday after spending last week with her mother, Mrs. F. G. Hin son and other relatives at White ville. Asa David Fussell of Jacksonville, Fla., is spending some time with his grandfather, Mr. A. O. Fussell. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Norwood and children of Jacksonville were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Southerland. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Braddy, Pau la and John Harvey spent Sunday with Mr. Braddy's parents, Mr. and Mrs R. A Braddy, Sr., at Wash ington, N. C, Little Diana Clay ton of Washington, D. C. returned home with them for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. McDonald Carr of Orpcnvi'.le were week end guestj of thei rparents. Mr. and Mrs. Cur tis Robinson and Mrs. Adele Carr. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fussell and rhildren I Ben. Arnold and 1 rry, of Hollywood, S. C, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Fussell. Ben Arnold and Larry remained to spend several weeks. Sunday pnests of Mrs. Alms Her rinc were Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Young and son of Clinton. Sgt. and Mrs. Joseph Zawistowski and Vallie Jo of CamD Lejeune. Mrs. Herring ac companied Sgt. and Mrs. Zawistow ski home and will spend a few aays. Rose Hill Music Club Mel Thursday The Rose Hill Music Club met Tuesday evening, June 14, at the home of Mrs. Granville Sheffield with Mrs. Kenneth Farrior and Mrs. Horace Ward as hostesses. Mrs. John C. Cooper Jr., presi dent, presided. During the business mwtint the following officers wtre elected for the coming year. Presi dent, Mrs. W. S. Wells; vice-president, Mrs. Dennis Ramsey; Record- in Secretary. Mrs. John Cooper, Jr. Treasurer, Mrs. W. G. Brummitt; Corresponding Secretary. Mrs. &. V. Wilkins. Mrs Dennis Ramsey and Mrs. H. C. Marshall were ap pointed as program committee fo; the new year. Mrs. L. A. Wilson gave a very interesting reoort on the State Con vention held at Hickory in May. The Rose Hill Club received a certi- fiia fnr achieving a one hundred Dr cent rating for the past year. A using vote c-f thanks was given Mrs, Cooper for her service as pres ident the past two years. Mr H C Marshall was in charge of the program which was "Classic ind Romantic elements in Art." mu Marsha Fussell Dlayed a pro gram of recorded music including "Waldstein Sonata" by Beethoven, with Walter Gieseking, at the piano, "Rhapsody in Blue by Gershwin and with Jesus Maria Sonrama. pianist and Victor Symphony Orchestra, Charles O'Connell, conductor. Tnncerto No. 1" in B flat minor bv Tchaikowsky, by the same or chestra as above. Plans were made to invite Charles Fussell. pianist of Winston - Salem to give a concert July 5th in the community memorial building. The hostess served a delicious dessert course during the social hour. V MO III . ;1) F yarsaw llsrdv;are Co. ' - .Wrsaw, N. d Mrs. Grcr.d Entertains Club Mrs. Evelyn Ground was hostess to her bridge ciun last iraj eve Siimmai. flmarer arrangements decorated the living room and din- in groom. ... i Mrs. H. K. Latham received an at . at. hish vnn rjrize. . Others playing were Mesdsmes B. B Longest, V. r airciom, ,r, Dail. Robert Herring, Murphy Sin gletary, snd Misses Annie Mae Brown snd Mary Ann Teachey. V m.. . mm.mA load drinks MV:oo w. . i -4. w Hurinc nroeTes- sions snd pink cow and cookies at conclusion of ptay. Mrs. V.H. Saunders Hostess At Bridge Mrs. James Fussell was high score k.iM mrxA MraivaH a nrize when Mrs. W. H. Saunders entertained her bridge club last Thursday eve ning. . rvhor. nlnvlntf were MesdamcS Ben Frederick, Robert Troy, Dave Webber, W. H. Fussell, Kooen n er ring, Robert Frederick and Dan V,. -OA 11 The hostess served delicious le mon ice box pie and coffee. Pruning Melons Adds Size, Qualify Tar Heel watermelon growers can sell more 30-pound or larger me lons if they prune them, says H. M. Covington, extension horticulture specialist at State College. Covington says that pruning is a very simple operation that requires little time but increase melon size and quality. It amounts to a thin ning and culling Job done at. the same time. It's done simply by sav ing only two of the largest, but most ideally - shaped melons, free of di seases, per plant. All the others must go including the smallest If the grower prunes when the first melons are the size of a quart fruit jar, it practically assures him of two 50-pound or larger melons per plant even during dry weather conditions. Since the 1955 acreage of water melons for North Carolina is estl-m-M at 14.000 acres compared to 11,000 acres in 1954 and South Caro lina's acres is one of the largest ever planted, it is even more im portant than usual that growers pro duce larger, quality melons. Soil Test Shows Farmer Wasted His Fertilizer A J. Womack of Hope Mills. Route 1, in Cumberland County, hopes he has a little more success with his tobacco crop this yer after soil tests showed he "wasted" his fertilizer last year. Negro County Agent B. T. Mc Neill sys that last year Wolmack used 1,600 pounds of 3-8-6 fertiliz er per acre on his tobacco. All he got for it was a crop of rough, bony tobacco that wouldn't cure. This year he had a soil test made. It was recommended that he use 900 pounds of 4-8-10 per acre with 60 pounds of top dressing. MrNpill aavs that Wnlmack'a de- Jrfioruir;tion is looking very good thus tar. He addg that he hopes the demOn- .tMtlAn urill kaln mnvlnM nthP U,HW "1.1 11 1-1 ,1 bltl . ..1..1- ------ farmers of the value of using recom mended fertilizers throughout their farming operations. with ThaK' 1 IKitM VAW ,,F71- ' - '-' ;ii V v " v j -3 U HASTE MAKES WASTE . ' 1 . ' (Contributed) " . , - "Haste makes waste" is a copybook maxim as fa miliar to most of us as a pair of old shoes And it's no wonder, for the ideate a very old one in our culture, x ''The'sentiment appears asvearly as the Fkst Century A. D., in the writing of Plutarch. . And the phrase, "Haste maketh waste apparently had been in the English lan guage a long time, when, in 1546, it was published in a collection of English proverbs and colloquial sayings. When any folk saying survives through the years as this one has, the reason quite possibly may be that the saying expresses some basic truth. Certainly we can find plenty of truth in this old, simple phrase when we apply it to our modern, complex traffic picture. For on our streets and highways haste often makes waste. - According to the State Department of Motor Ve hicles, nearly four out of ten drivers involved in a fatal auto smash-up in 1954 were violating a speed law eith er exceeding stated speed limits or driving too fast for conditions. And this figure, of course, does not include accidents which resulted only ih injury or property dam age. So it might be said, in traffic, that speed wastes lives. And that it also wastes work time and health. And it runs up an immense annual bill of damage to pro perty. Then too. it has been nf mntor vehicles take more tires faster than would the slower speeds. Haste really does make waste in traffic, which is an excellent reason for everyone to support the traffic saff -tv program on speed control, "Slow Down and Live," which is being sponsored statewide by the Governor's Traffic Safety Council. National svmbol of this a bee-like creature always It's a dangerous, and costly, r MR. FARMER NOW IS THE TIME TO CHECK YOUR TO BACCO FLUES. WE STOCK ANY SIZE FLUES. WE REPAIR ALL TYPES AIR COOLED MOTORS, ELECTRIC WELDING AND BRAZ ING ON ALL MACHINERY. SEE US FOR A COMPLETE LINE OF FISHING SUPPLIES. A. C. HALL HARDWARE CO. Wallace, II. C. Leak established that fast speeds gasoline and oil. wear out same distance traveled at program is the Hurry Bug, in a state of nervous haste. way to live and drive. v : S i '..V ;.: f,-- 'Frc3i3' Frc.::!:n 0! Sccbl Sctcri! - A,n 4H imnnrtant ehancea in .v. c i.i Snmiritv law Drovided DV i lav vw - ? - fh M-antlv named 1954 amend. menta is the disability "freexe" pro visions proviaea us we mw, a. . Avers District Manager of the Dis- trt Office of the Social Decuwy , Administration, ; . , "" ssldodayv::y-'.(. K't" A . . . . . 1 vrilmlnfftm I A new feature was added to ins v- riMU enerallv to pre vent the depreciation of or loss of benefits suffered Dy wage I ulf amnlnVMl individuals who became totally disabled snd thus unable to maintain their regu- Ur: Tc'jbao fcrczrl No More Smoke! No More Fumes I No More Vent Pipes! No More Lines To Level! AND Liffetiae DURIIEIl Gaaranlce (fully automatic control jui Tins m k::iE with ' ti:e "Just ask one ot our thousands of , users" ...then... See It At DEVAME OAS & APPLIANCE CO. PI" I ' el Sls . Eiiazoeimovn ti o LOWESt PRICESI Now rfuuiy models of Dodge trucks an priced tower than all other makes! Yet with these low prices, quality-built Dodge trucks are dependable as ever! HIGHEST POWER! Power-Dome V-8 engines, with 169 to 202 hp, are the most powerful of any leading trucks. You'll ' save time, save on operating costs, with these modern, snort-stroke V-8's. Thrifty 6's available, too. i ry-pj, windshield of any make! New Dodge trucks give. . " v you brilliant, Forward Look . drive best f 'If -.i,.'-';..'' ..: . .. v lar earnings under the Act Under u.e w-a aw U person be came disabled and incapacitated for . work there was coming to be done unia no reacaeu kge Ob or aied and . a claim wss filed oa his wag re cord. During the period of his disab ility, when his earnings decreased, r stopped altogether, the wage earner's average monthly wage de- , creased, thus lowering his bene fit payments or In some eases elim- -lnating them altogether because ot lack of insured status. - The 1954 amendments to the law do not pro vide lor Insurance payments to be made to wage-earners snd the self -employed when the disability first occurs, but merely to freeze the wsge record at that point upon cer, tain conditions to be met by th disabled persons. W L-3D' ' GAS fi:.ed mion n SMARTEST STYLING ! The biggest wrap-around styling. One test will tell you there for your business I; "utod for 14 yeert tor M orner maae , . t. a. tu?.::er aco. MAIN ST. " 1 pinkiim, Phone 2346 I
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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June 23, 1955, edition 1
12
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