Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / April 19, 1962, edition 1 / Page 31
Part of The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
A U i h . 4 V, I. Pi ' ... n . . t. . j iy( Stste's Inspection Service : S'app warned that a. backlog j ble," he nid., ild taild VP- during May end nn with- many operators waiting til ,the-last ffaw weeks t nn for snection. "It has been the usual pereinee that most plant will re- j .Thnsa BUMtsineratin!! under Jed? eral inspection will, not, come under the' etnte compulsory inspection, r; Under prescst plants, a plant will be approved anj iw under :tne uv itA cninA itpfrvff irf .mniftpatiAA wwrtiAn uprvlrA .nf Boon jtff .-it, fl ( premises, eequjpmenU or' opr- qualify, and need not wait until ions or combiration of all before Ju'y J to beghVsitch operation.-- -hey can be qualified as 'o ftcial 1 Operators of meat -ad " poultry dants under the law; These c1an- processing plant in, -North Cro ;e& are 0fteq Mmr -eensuming and ' lina subject to teomptrtsory tespec anbrtt be put off tmi.il the last iJays Uon,- fend who have not applied: "tor ,f .timedf the want ts.to be elisri- It are ureei to contact the Meit T -wt . ; lis:- it i -.'.T.-,:-. ., ,. .WiSiiia-m. ?:::..WwOS;::' fit ' :::::::: f $ .WC-m . It -!t -- 'f , i. . WiyV-SWi VJ;.: :.; . t i . i ! M I III III I ' and Poultry Inspection Service. N. ,11 lftftranr Af PrniHOC l)pflVPn C. Department ot- Agncuuure m j jjt f U J MliU I WllilllvJ iivvviiwm : ttakigflf as soort as sibie, , ' ,','!. ktc Million Savs Veh Administration the seriously disabled, aaminisira- tive costs ana nrusceyaiitsuus uc" fits Gardf nTlme I am quoting an article I have just read in ?;ie "National Apple Npws". the olficial voice of Hie National Apple Institute. 1 tht ough it rather clever and am pas sing it along for your enjoyment. Let's call it 'Core Curriculum." j "A core curriculum is one in I which tne children bring apples to school, eat them, and plant the cores in the school ground?. They Arithmetic In their own words, leases and blossoms and then fruit This is Science. They paste pieces ot bark and twigs and lea ves on paper and they paini pii. tnr nf tap aaDles in a dish. IJl.S is Art. Homemaking. Then everyone eats ' ferrormed Without i text-book or and., watch and flO(- them and learns about weir nu- ' .4 1 2"? t tfc. .,hJ la the ITS1 I81"6' U WSS thence Tg and WdThW of Educ 'These ac:ivities have been plant them i the ioMM grpunu ijon. . -...--i; n.... n,A.l...,ilcinn nf tlif NrtrtKv farnlina received a total Wi awaie-uKi uic i""""'""-,"' ' '--, ...... Ymcuisory laws wik res.riti pui'.ua, oi iu,oo,- dolni business across county line: and set vi .cs during the f seal yea; aiwt JUv t. ' J V- - yr of 1961, J. D. pcRamtw, 'D-' Starp roWrut 't'"t to date nager of the inston-s!em Ve.e or.ly'ond fourth f the . ncwiy 200 raw A?mi"ii,uation iterjnal Oi piants on fi'e wWj th3 Department fice, annou. (ccd taaa. ' r A-n-m'tuVa-ci' od for 1 Actual distrioution of this sui. Uon and survey. His offlc is -is outlined, in the 19.-1 annual ;e Amm?Z no ices to all plants lis- port of t, VA, ,w on ,saie- al ffrthW. tut he notes that the Government Pnn.n.g jnany win rot " r " u i, nnmrntifii All liw. til .--r-. fur service-conncjiied disaoitUe., and pension for touil and pe-mu nent nonservice-connected disaoi lities and pension fjr tatai 'anu (lisaDiliues were paid to 62,000 living veterans in the amount oi sss'isn 031. ' 1 Death compensation . and pen sion were paid to ihe dependents of 26,456 deceased veterans in the amount of $23,509, 504. Certain GI insurance dividend ana muenuilty payments totaling $22,680,608 were made to vete rans and their bene iciaiies. come in and see tlie ALIrNEW rs slice tljr $re not' lifted with For feed mixed the way you want it depend on Us. We erind and mix grains , . . put in vitamins minoralfi nntihintirs and health nrotectmg, gro wth-stimulating additives in tne proporuwns j - . . i - . a. . f ; .specify. Cost is low, service prompt, rw pium- able feeding brings us your formula. An average of 144 disabled-veterans of World War II and the Korean Conflict in North Carolina trained tlunr.'g the year under the vocational rehabilitation act 10 study Tney overcome the handicaps of their pick the apf disaDilities. xney reeeivcu owm in subsisience, tuition, supplies and equipment 'Tho children sit arounj unde. the tree siname Is t.ie ijhade U tho dm Annl Tree.' This is Mu sic. The stury ot Johnny Apple- t.or.,1 i tnlH t.hpin. This is Liorary climb the tree and . Dick the apples. This is Physical fiiHiinatlrm. "ihey count the apples, 'taking tho unrmu ones. lniS la PIESEL 1 auvav An average of 3,143 veterans .. Foreizn Laneua'res a tree is and wnat .1 ...Vifin thov saw thp co in cash :, tr.. ThPv alsj - zana. . ims is trained during the year under the . teU what World War It an Korean GI Bills. ' . u h 1 write letters to the National Ap- IThey received $4,30,407 . 1 1 mironr-oe The remainder of cash benefits, .. Growers' Association. This is services and other VA expendi- Language Arts. The gifted child- tures. in Worth taronna uur,.,B rgn do enrichment the year totaled $jo,isiuoi. iuew jash benefits and services inclu ded war orphans' educational al lowances. hosDitalization. loan gu arantee and direct loan programs, tha Department. He urges that all who plan to go under the inspection, whether they receive a notice or not,, contact his office as soon as possible. i mm) ; J. f . SUMMERLIN FEED MILL Phone QL B-Zm Route 2. Mount Olive; NC FARM GROWTH And ., PROGRESS .it - -i "..ib"JIIB . .. ; IN niiPMKl " -,' 'WRERE , PROGRESS ISN'T A SLOGAN BUT A REALITY n n F SI Furniture - f-n ? " j . Dculcsvillo, N. Agency .! , ; C . Phono : CY 8-3651 How Much Steak ; Do You Get For An Hour's Work? An hour's work in the United Sta tes will, buy 37 ounces of round steak. ; In Great Britain, an hourls work buys only 19 ounces of round steak; in France, sevon ounces; in Russia, four ounces. Russians spend about 50 per cent of their income for food, the French and English about 30 per cent. Jn the-United States, food expense amounts to about 20 per cent of consumer income. research by rpadinff Kilmer's 'Trees or by finding out about Isaac Newton, the Apple of Discord, the Garden of Eden, William Tell and other apple-y events. "They learn such words as ar bor. L'arbre, Apfel, .Baum, man gana, This is Foreign Languages "The boys build boxes to s:on the apples! This is Industrial Arts. And ,tne girls bake tnem ana sa uce them and pie them. This is Biggest worker in the 35-hp class! M New draft control 3-point hitch "thinks for itself" to maintain the working depth you set . . . in any terrain, any soil New, powerful 4-cylinder Diesel en gine delivers 35 pto hp, 31 draw bar hp m For Expert Watch Repairs See HINES JEWELERS Warsaw, N. C. Dr. Thomas W. Alley Optometrist Warsaw, N. C. Rear of Warsaw Drug Company lues, ft Sat.- from 8:30 to 5:80 Eyes Examined - Glasses Fitted 7J Hew all-purpose live hydraulic system provides automatic implement control HJ New, heavy-duty box-section front axle adjusts for row-crop versatility Constant running pto tepi up powered machine efficiency Positive differential lock stops one wheel slip for "keep-going" traction 8 forward speeds, from 1.5 to 15.5 mph, helps you match power to load Amazingly low fuel cost . . . low main, tenance cost . . . even bw first costl 'Eitimottd obirva IMIIMAIIONAl MMVISTCR Match your payments to your income 111 liKDUl IflMjr. PUKUS Call Us today for a demonstration WEST MACHINERY CO. Phone 52 3-446 Kinston, N. C. Agriculture in Action By WALLACE PARKER N. C. Farm Bureau Federation Thestory is old but It needs re peating. Lest e forget; Commun ist and Socialist countries simply rannnt nrnrtiira the food they need. The whip is no match for private initiative of a free people. The evi dence lies all' 'around us. It is found 1 m the torts of Canadian wheat ship ped to Red China, and ior-tnai matter, in the tons of 'American wheat shipped to communist Yugo slavia. Peasants in the same areas oi China that once produced abund ance are urged to aend more of their meager store of food to still harder-pressed areas. A new propa ganda campaign has been launched with the new year to persuade pea sants to remain on low rations fhemselves as they send more grain to those who have even less; "Pat riotic socialist education"- the cam paign is -called, and its aim is "to move peasants to feel the glory of felling to the state their output of grain, cotton and other farm prod ucts. Somewhat tongue-in - check, the rted Chinese party officials say they will continue to look to the Soviets for guidance in solving their food shortage. Apparently they are able to ignore Russia s own crop iau (ires with the blindness peculiar to the true Marxist. Increasingly, those failures are harder to ignore. Recently, the "Russian Republic one of the largest farm areas in the Soviet -Union, failed to meet its plan in -producing meat, milk and grain. It now joins the Kazakhstan area in missing major food targets. Somehow the words of Dr. Earl But seen) to fit here. "In much of . the world people go to bed and pray each night that they will have en ough food for the next day. Amer icans alao pray about food at night. They pray to have enough will-power to stay on. their nonfattening diets." . 'J;i , AH of which does not mean that we should point to our mountains of farm surplus and say in effect, 'see, we have no farm problem." Doctors say the term 'malnutri tion"- applies 'equally to persons either over or underweight. in the that neither receives the right Jtkind anJ amount of , food. ' ; , . S-CKROCM 5, you DRUGGIST Plays An IMPORTANT ROLE In The FARM LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY Always Ready To Compound Your Doctor's Prescriptions Promptly And Accurately, In Case Of Sickness. - You Can Depend On SAMS DRUG STORE TO DoJustThat- 1 Ml o) it STORE Phone 28 9-2442 Rose Hill, N. C. ( - . jM "i" j,MflBee"e""i . , ...... .ft-. r f ..... ( t ! . ' ' ' .'.:'.;-:. ."- .'r' ...'-.....: V -..(.."" '.. . ' . . ' .
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 19, 1962, edition 1
31
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75