0 S Atber C. Brows LACKLAND ATB, Tex mam JBeste Asher C Brown son 1 . Air KEXXl . I- .a. Air man Second C.fisi Vulliam F. Di xon of Wallace, N. C, is being re issifned to Westover AFB, Masa following his graduation from the United States Air Force techni cal training course lor aircraft ra dio repairmen heue. r Airman Dixon was trained to operate,, .test,' and repair inter phone am) emergency radio equip ment. . v , ' The airman, 800 ' Ralph Dixon of Kenaneviile, N. C, is a gradu ate of Wallace r Rose Kill School, Teach N. ; C.1 He entered the service in July 1961, r BOB'S Y M. PENNINGTON ' Army Specialist Four Bobby M. Pennigton, 25, son of Mr. and Mrs. David J. "Pennington. Route 3. Moutn Olive. N- C was. one of the 600 representatives of the 82d Airborne Div. to march in New York City's Armed Forces Day Parade May 19. . I Specialist Pennington and other 824 Division personnel,, normally stationed at Fort Bragg, N. C. marched down Fifth Ave. in full battle dress that' included bayo netts. fixed to rifles. " ' 1 A squad leader in Company D- of the : division's. 801st Infantry, TO THE PLANETARIUfV)M See ; fr. ' wgj. 4 f wu. f iuwmih. n.--T-ihe entered the Army in Novem W 2 Wallace, N, dis being t- ! Jf nd received basic train. assigpeJ,to tli. United StatesAir J' nfham radio and radar pisintenance ipe cialists at Keesler AFB, Mtfe' H Airman Brown,' who has' com pleted ,hK bic military 'training f Army pew" bfery.w aelected for. the afivan-1 ced course oa the basis of his U-. ";te iJf" terests and aptitudes. ' i v. He is a 1961 graduate of Chin quapin (N. C.) , High School. . x- i " " . Bwtt F. Bel.,!.--!.-.i SEYMOUR JOHNSON. AFB, N. C,-"' Airman- First Class Boyce V DA.at .Al Xir ........ . tv fc has' beVn ;ws" & include! b?yonets Tactical An1 Command Noncom KAY N. EZZELL Army Specialist Four Ray N. Mrs. Ldla A. Ez- Rose Ilill. N. C. was the 82d Airborne Division to mar' ch to New York City's . Armed Forces Day Parade May 19, i Specialist Ezzell and other 82 d Division personnel, normally sta tioned at Fort Bragg, N. C. mar ched down Fifth Ave. in full bat- missioned Officers Preparatory School here. . . '- Airman Best, a United States Ah; Force yeheicle 'operator; ' will Remain here for'duty".?..', ) The airman,; son , of iMr. land Mrs.: B. F. Best of Route k1-Warsaw, is married to the former Maj- f aret F. Medlin of Route 1,' War aw. They have three children. , fixed to rifles. A survey computer in Mortar Battery of the division's 901st In fantry, he entered the Army in September 1959. ' CLEVELAND M. KELLY ,Ajrmy Specialist Four Cleve land M. Kelly, 21, sod of Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Kelly, Chinquapin, N. C. was one of the 600 repre sentatives of the 82d Airborne Di- Congratulations R. W, Rivenbark has just been honored by earning the Presidency of our 1962 Presidents Club. lie was leading agent in production for the Company during the year 1961, and will attend and preside over the Annual Company Convention in Miami, Florida in June. , .," Mr. Rivenbark has proved himsellto be a cap able and qualified life underwriter, serving the Warsaw-Wallace area. ? Call him at Warsaw 29 3-4433 for a review of your life insurance program. v . fv .... " Durham Life Insurance Company V ' NOME OFFICE '. I PAMILV I -.ri" vision to march in New York City's Armed Forces Day, Parade May 19. vf.-P- -'-'' i Specialist Kelly '.end other 82d Division personnel, jiormaly sta tioned at Fort Bragg, N. C, mar ched down Fifth Ave. in full bat tle dress that included bayonets fixed to rifles. ; --:?.'''. : A gunner in Company D of the division's 501st Infantry, he en tered the Army in April 1960. - Kelly attended . Charity High School, Rose Hill. - , Henry C. Phillips BEEVILLE, Tex. Ens Henry C. Phillips, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger V. Phillips of Route 1, Kenansville(, N. C. is undergo ing the final phase of his flight training at the Chase Field Naval Auxiliary Air Station, Beeville, Tex. . , He reproted to Chase Field, May 14, and has been assigned to Train ing Squadron 24. Ens, Phillips entered the service in June 1961 and is a gr.tciuale oi Duke University, Durham, N. C. q iil ii I iThis is a repeat but I think it is , worth repeating. ,; Hope , your local editor will follow . through and egg-you-on, still more. , It s travel time! .Where in this good land of ours can you find more exciting natural beauty than in the Tar Heel State - Va riety Vacationland? The 43 peaks in "the Land of the Sky, all about 6,000 feet in alti tude.. beckon to you. Here the Appalachian chain seems to have United and ' fused " together and then to break up in a confusion of lofty peaks with a labyrinth of intervening - valleys. This is the land of rhododendron, mountain laurel, cook breezes, clear wa ters and fighting trout. t At the other end of this 500 mile strip of land we call Tarhel lia the ghost of Nags Head bec kons Here the rivers become sou nds and the sounds meet the oc ean in a never-ending restlesness. Dunes are piled high by the ever- shifting sands and trees bend away from the salt spray. Every Tar Heel should be aole to claim a trip down the most famous out er banks in the world. Go to Hat teras this summer. For the mountatineer, a trip to the East with stops at Old Salem, Tryon Palace and The Lost Co lony will be rewarding and an adventure you will not soon for get. There are many interesting stops in between, and the fish Will be biting in coastal waters. For (he easterner, don't stop un til you have driven on a section of the Blue Ridge Parkway, the most popular and scenic drive in Eastern .America. And while you are' about this business of disco vering North Carolina, stop off at Boone and see "Horn in the west or Cherokee and see "Unto These Hills. " - - , Don't put it off any longer. Let's go! If you do, I am. sure that our paths will cross some where along the line of travel be cause we always get in at least one trip to the coast and one to the mountains during the summer season. Invitation Issued Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kedar Dunn request the honour of your presence at the marriage of their daughter Arfielia Katherine to . Mr. Gerald' Haywood Cottle on Sunady, the tenth of Juno at three O'clock Woodland Methodist Church Albertson, North Cariolna TO THE GOOD PEOPLE OF DUPLIII COUNTY a i ... i ..",i, V' - I wish to express my sincere appreciation for your VOTE and v SUPPORT as t candidate for the Duplin County Board of Education, t . I shall do my best to fill the office in a manner that will justify ' your confidence in me. x . . " . -fi -.'.. " if ... - 1 . . i. ".'. . . ' ' Also I would like to commend my opponent Randal Albertson and his Supporters for the manner in which they conducted- their - F. ' ....... -;-...- . , -y M " 7 - .::J':- i Thanks "i V-. ELir.iSTT E. ROGERS . , ( Paid Political Adv.) 4 1 . . , - . EAGER BEAVER SERVICE PROGRAM! KEEP FULL ' One phone call is all it takes to get our compete year round ssrvics! Now Is The Time To Get 'Your; TOBACCO CURING OIL TANKS FURNISHED . i ....... j HEATING OILS IX Out front Hi quality... ' Out front In nrvlco, lool Valfer Herring Jr. Tel. 293 - 4311 Warsaw, N. C D.j Feeds Are June's Best Food Buys . June Dairy Month is. celebrating its 16th anniversary this month. The purpose of the popular yearly event is to salute the dairy industry of America,, June Dairy Month is also geared to -awaken the American people to the need for using dairy products for proper nutrition and dief habits. Last year 17 mil. cows on over a million dairy farms produced near ly $7 billion quarts of milk. The June Dairy Month celebration coin cides with the busiest season in dairying, when milk production is at it peak . in many parts of the country. Every American consumed the equivalent of over 640 pounds of milk in ail forms last year. Studies of consumer food expend itures showed that for the 19 c enls of the "market basket dollar" that Americans spent on milk products, the American fmnily obtained 23 26 of their calories, 40-45', of their protein, 75-84 'e of their cal cium, 59-76 of their riboflavin. 35 39 of the Vitamin A, 18-19 of their thiamine and 5-f of their iron and niacin. "I have lonf been convinced Hint milk is an important aid (o good health." commented President Ken nedy "at the Miik and Nutrition Con ference held in Washington, D. C. last January. "This has led me to direct that milk be served at every White House meal from now on. And I expect that all of us will benefit from it." VA Problems Not Decreasing Problems for which veteran., need the specialized help of Ve terans Administration social win kers have not d'vrensed in tin years since Kort-a and World V..i n. . Indications- are that sick ai-.: disabled veterans have n'lly lr:. ded wartime problems ior pe.u . time ones. In fact, the VA social walk i seload has been ituTviviiiw . ily; according to J. 1). IVHa.eu manager of the North !ir. Veterans AdniiniMratioii Co? office. DeHamus, said Social wo completed service fur mo' e 279,000 veterans in fiscal compared with upprovasa! 000 during fiscal lvo0, 25i' r fiscal 1957, and 248.000 in fiscal 1956. . Aging of veterans and the in creasjng number of 'mental pa tients leaving VA. hospitals under social work supervision are ma jor factors in producing a larger VA social work ca-seload, DeRa mus said. . Vacancies for social workers exist at VA hospitals and outpa tient clinics across the nation. Those who hold a graduate degree in social work may apply for VA employment to the Central Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Veterans Administration Central Office, Washington 25, D. C. About 80 percent of all VA hos pital mental patients returned to their communities are under VA 'social work supervision for some time after they leave the hospi tal, DeRamus said. The number wa 7,617 in fiscal 1953; 9,985 hi fiscal; 1955; 13,200 in fiscal 1957; 16,488 during fiscal '(9; 17.330 in fiscal 1960, and 20,907 during fiscal 1961, During 1961 almost 4,000 VA mental patients lived in foster homes, halfway houses, and other special com munity facilities. Look upon every day as the whole of life, not merely as a section; and enjoy and improve the present with out wishing, through haste, to rush on to another. - Jean Paul Richter The present has a l itself. , " ( . . . -' Oliver WendU &Imes To those leaning on the sustain ing infinite, today to Mf srftb kits sings. ' , '.. t'.' Mary Baker Eddy For Cx.Wkh. ; Repair! - - IiTNES JEWELE25 Warsaw, N. C' CENTER THEATRE Thursday Only June 7th Blood and Roses Wednesday June B Starring Mel Ferrer Elsa Marttnelli And Annette Vadim Reyond Reason - Beyond Belief! e Friday- Saturday June 8-9 Hell Is For Heroes! Starring Steve McQueen Bobby Darin Fess Parker Harry Guardino And Nick Adams I 1HI1 1,1 III Sun.-Mon.-Tues. June 10-11-12 State Fair , Starring Pal Boone ' Bobby Darin Pamela Tiffin Ann Margret Tom Ewell Wed. thru Sat. June 13-16 WALT DISNEY Big Red Starring Walter 1'idneon Featuring Eniilc Genest Introducing Gilt's Payant Janet I e Bertruncl Plus Selected Short Subjects GIFT SUGGESTIONS SHIRTS by Manhattan Sports Wear And Swim Wear by Jaofzen Wallets - Belts -Jewelry by HICKOK Let Them Select The Gift Of Their Choice . . Give A GIFT CERTIFICATE Free Gift Wrappings Tom R Best "HOUSE OF 1000 SUITS" 119 E. Walnut St. Goldsboro, N. C. Serve The Milk That IS Fresher By A Day Jima IS Refresh with MI UK 1 if ; St! 4 v ! i- It comes from our local farms io our modern plant . . direct to you FRESHER BY A DAY. Get Wayne Dairy milk in the full bloom of freshness. Call RE 4-0574 for home delivery. Come see us during June Dairy Month. - It's cool and casual as tippiri' WAYNE DAIRY GOLDSBORO, N. C.