, urn N times , "'y in Krnausvlile, N. C County Seat ef LVFLIN COUNTY ', ' , ; -' : '""e and printing plant, Kenansvllle,.N. C . , RUTH P. GRADY . -' ' - 1 C7.-NER and PUBU TR t ' " " .', ; RUTH P. C.HADY. f .TOR 1 " -4 At The Post Office, f. ..jniHe. H .C. at second class matter"', , i " l;vianaviUe, Day -171-JVIKh tS S-flO : :S; $3.50 per year jislfe ft. C. Bales Tax ..a. ftnslnw' lidrr. Saitiksnn. N'nr Hanarer v: i Lei i area W North Carolina and i is elsewhere,' w-- . fv, Tax iJttMfltnM mIm 4 r ' " Ccur.iy , Journal, '. devoted to the religious, . material, v jSay feoMoAe arid agricultural development's Duplin ... : --i . Vr - . - - - . ? ' , ' A.. mm UsmM-. I - DEARTHS' : I reckon we had what them Con jossmen would call a filibuster fcf the tmtm Store Saturdaf nffctt. ' Ed Dobfitife 4o6k: tba' floor, and it was ' hardM! git him; to set down ' that it isforgit Sfertator Morse. to shut up- - i ' ,v w-v. . 4 first flE" KaUjfis" npset' trver reading in the papers where . Sena- . tor Gruening of Alaska (got up. in tHs Seaate- thethec ; day nd give " a "corhirteTgiat fet Ms new 'State.; He "luihSuTideTP'Wa " bering wimraen-in Alaska bf 22,367 as nf no"frnd- adyijtKimmeno hurry' to 'Afttska'irore the gap olov- , Ifclerri "Webster fallowed bs kw f ey usei tneSenate rot everything ee andV didn't t 8e Ttothmet ' v'rong wRH'SenMeKSrweninft- trying to git ri(i'bf 'th'Kiifcr8 tn Alas ka He relle ttttfll' When. son- BUr Byr(r irf Vlrgirnr got; ip in -the f?nate aWgrv-a'trecipt fet-rt pie, advSTng'thaP apfhingut Vir- limber, JVIouldinj, ; Pi - lAng' Supplifg SASli 4 DOORS. ASBESTOS SIDING. HOOFING ' OF ALL K iso; - '- , : ijaster; Rock Lath, ; SLettrocli Mortar, Cement r !,PsiitsAHr , E lars liar'' ane ' GlhlERV TfiRf , fcOTTA V J. . ii jK,r , . , JJ. GARTER -d - :'(t,l---'2Ui.l-V'' sf6p:'v'-v;:;:.5BUYiV'', : 1 -SAVEv C. A; K. G A S S T A T 1 0 II l, Jn ? ,t ' -l v - - - - ' - i LOCATE NEXT' TO . . ierularifc' Per Gallon ; , Hi-Test 30c , j- . i U SOctane ; ,' ' MS Octane' ; BJkJL lells Gas 'And Kerosene ' t "Never Gives Out" I i 'All Brands Of Oil i BELTONm MINSHEW OWNERS MATTHS MINSHEW Inc. 1- ' ' f i ' - ' tw' - v - v, A.r-f.' Li-' '; f' f' FOR RENT VlOUSES & APARTMENT ;" in Kenansville and Warsaw - ! " Mrs. Belton .. " ... t J .' i i ...... . Phone 55? -- : , . - OR : ..' i ' '. ' Mrs. Homer' C. Brown Phone 3741 . r 1H; per year phi He N. C Sales "'-'' I ., - ? 'a- fairnlaliaaV jkfl mmim! ' 'SAYS v; 'giitja" apples was fitten fer the best pies. ' Farthemwrei claimed '"Clfltri Senator nByid' .vn hadthe recipe printed 3a-' the CitgitsaanaK Re cordi Anyti0wn alleWediCBri( bach elors ain't ,nottfd iwusing large families find we jot 4oy kDep large families omihgaldng toftneetile tax : Ibad.' Gome-. t04hink about f it, sdid ;iem; it"was raigWy patriotic thing ft. Seaatbri Gtueng ttcfeit up in the Senate ahd Advertise the slwrtape' ot Vfirrtij' ki'AWska.? r ! ug Hookum was lamenting it was 9 great pity them Senators didn-'t spend more time on items like the shortage ot whwrnen In Alaska and appte pJe ln Virginia .and less1 ttrrie oa atockpilni'i and foreign aid. Bug ald,'itA,woUHwMvfr.,the taxpayers trillions. f ' ' '.;'" 'f-t. i V'jjiV ') J5ofc"Grubb', who! Is a authority on wimnien, put Hie ,lld on tills .tub Jectnby. claiming it was a- deed Jsstie by n'o; anyhow. Zeke srecotav ed that 2 ewiir After the Senator's hrtowncernent," Alaska was $trn- peding 'with immn t , y rir 'Anothet1- item Ed ' Claimed tfpset him: 4'blt.. was that - piece' in fvut latest 'pamphlet' from the bepat- ment : Of ' Agfjculture announcing some college, was fitting waternnj-; oti vine 4hat. would grow? sister. eight melons to the vine like toma to vines. Ed . claimed - the country was already overstocked with wat ermelons and, afore' we knew it the taxpayers would be paying millions fer storing the surplus. vA ;A11 the fellers: was agreed that folks "would, 'have more peace of mind- if ; the Department of' Agri culture would quit putting jgqV: ff more pamphlets ultwgit the New Frontier betted explored. Fer irt; stanst, Ed 'claimed he was reading a piece about a Cannibal Chief m Laos setting alongside a pot where he was gittihg a victim ready fer dinner; Ed I allowed as how the piece 6aid , . the Chief was reading a u, . uepanmem oi Agncunure pamphlet titled, "100 Ways To Ser ve jaankind.? . ,1 ty; , Your truly, Uncle Pete, '" . UtTPLIN MOTORS Minshew . . . .. Warsaw, N.C .. RoseIiai,N. C. 4-- ji6V-A Gfcdly nome - j Samuel was i. born in a Godly Home. Che boy Samuel became the Hist i of the Judgesf of CaanarV arid the first 'of the Prophets. ' He was born XKO 8. O Samuel is the best known book of the Bible. 1 "- Everyone knows that, the strong est single ' influence in a person's lite is his home. We sometime take that fort granted A On the contrary, a home may wreck a man before he starts. It is said many alcoho lics get their -start not their start ia dtinking tut their-start In the nervous, unsettled1 iegOsHipn whi ch easily slips'dowrPuito alcoholism and . other dntg.xtiabits'ahd even before he fs sti yearn of i jtge- the lack of harmony .between parents; iB treatment, or 'simple neglect. - What does God require of -Us as parents? Bring up our children "In the wn-ture and admonition of the iLrd."; not fcringj 4hem) up as ank mals. .Their spirits: as well as their mind and' body must be cultivated; Teach (them about God,, and - the purpose of i' their present Wej Take them by the ihand ejma the' gentle urging f love, load them to ChrUt. Wtf are" responsible to :the extent of our ability, not only for the wel fare, of our children, but for their eternal welfares .- : . 1 ' When Samuel .heard the voice of God. it sounded to Samuel like Eli, the Priest, Samuel loved Eli. A child needs the -Godly influence of church and heme also personal m fittence.-r"--".' t-. -r By D.E. Earnhardt My people perish fer lack of know- Ignorance Xathe mother of little ighoranrjesf Devotion "omes frm inelliel cofntern.' ''' - "'When a mian 'knows everything his ee6tism -if painkiller that' keeps nis ignorance i Iram-' hurtihg himi' ; Somebody v is- esponsibl for a crowd of i religieus; morons ' he know. Donald Suck and nor Daniel, Olive Oj'l and-not Onessimus" Son ny Mooseface and 'ftot 1 Sampson. They' think- pietjn refers io 'blaek berry ttme. and Divine Grace to a goodlookiirg totia,",- i.'.j a 1 tdld my boy ta take his books and t& on to'-schbol'snd ttot bring batfc.erHt.krnMnce H told; "I Can get that, at horned i' - i, '- ' 1 Every home needs three books-a dictionary! -bankbook1 and a Bible, The bankbook tieedr rubber teand but the Bible is- tike pticltet ktitfe 1 which' ii useful! Hnly ,wHeh It 'Is. open. '-'-.'i.: ""iy ,t tf. v Helicoptertr are beinr -trsed . to erect glued laimnatdt:afhes ot Southern Pine in' rewf ) Systems . ( bulldlngs;"Ii -tp P9adena,"iTxarf, chemical plant,- ttwhlrlyWrttJtP!t the arches in the1 root syitem ta Bite day.' "' " I -i ,!"t'rn ii mil " A one v siyteenth of ah Inch dif-' ferenee in iM tesgtn bf ttoti 1 r ; 'm chahge the"Me,f 'S'ptoid i.,. i. .iiiu i. -'ill'.. Vi.Mll Oi 'J J!U' piwuH-,, deep yEir; IG water ui fanieea m -I'm, E. L.' Rlisisjm ( Register's" Crossroads ) 1 RFLT Rode'ir.!!' Phbire 28 S-ll MAVhat Is llode' Without Water" mm AUU - If - you have crowded stands of Pine Timber or stands with poor-quality trees, why not let us thin your - woodland to provide for faster grdwth of future saw logs?'' You will not only , re ceive current income, bat also improve the ap peartance o f these ktsns.' Call or " Write RODEm e:: : VARD - P. O. Co 172 WALLACE, N.C. Home Ph. . . Office Ph. 23 0-4831 O AT 5-2870 Eose KiU Wallace Tard Ph. ; - O AT Z-ZZZ2 O V.'s- e C"'-3 "-re jl I I - - .., 1 ,-',. . it I .1.1 ci-fwrj c.-." - rT i I monsy in Hen s , 1 ' ' 7U 1 I am concerned, as are all Amer- leans,' by ' the recent shipment 1 mto Cttha of Soviet trljtartFeqi'i1rm!nt arid- technicians. K wot hweVer !J(ftVt;hwevii anse fbi panje ed-actkm, , ' This Ttlnd of genera) ews Always gives- rise to1 .minors,, -'specBiatJoh and-1 suspicion. 1 A,' New YWk' Sena tor; for ' ejcample, has been -quoted as saying' that he had infromation from reBable- soUrcei that -the Sov iet "Uriiod had sefit "'Thdusaiids' of nhiformed troops" to Cuba. three Senators ' are .openly immediate,' direct military against". Cuba ''and, indeed, attempting to make this paign. Issue. . ItumorS are rampant : thi equipment included large and that the- Soviet personni REPORT troin Your Conflretsmmi" " .accompanied it will proceed to btfild ' launchine tiads iiom which ,missilesll'llhuhehei''irt Cuba could bedirecteni "with 'pinpoint accuracy to' any'" pbint' wrfhlti 'the United Stated f,0:," " " fhe facts, as distinguished from the rumor' and ' speculation, are these? '(If Jllissia has, indeed, sent some 5,000 men Identified by Presi dent Kennedy' ss1' '"technicians" to Cuta."(2)' Russia hai sent to Cuba certain weapons 'and military equip ment, 'largeiy'nnfdentified thus far, but' known specifically to include anti-aircraft artillery with radar, sighting devices of a type the Sov iet no longer uses and considers ob- -solescent. (3 Thus far, there is no : evidence that construction of rocket i launching pads is under way. -The United States cannot and . V WASHINGTON ...a chCki;:g; ACCOUNT at WACCAMAW! .QJouV got U iqc(c;ivieit you're got it Qa)M ; m ( r I I 0$ : .... ,. A ... ,t . w !Ip Federal :"-. lit!, f i i i j i- i to o ii, .j a jl, ,iiic ' ! I fr SoviL-t-toiitroiied ! ballistic Mi&hilcs. i, it t not and should not mill' . ' t'i' nver by V n C i -i v" ' -.ion (.1 i1 of . e ' , uroe , .ctii 1-. f, t is 'is a' tin..- ior c .Ml 1 eli.'! 'i inf' on aiid l.iii. We wi,I .i nothine t'.e s; 1 ilOwi hcads,' cjear t! 'jy rash' statements, reel. ..ss action r another "Bay of Pigs" type fia sco and our people should not be jWrrtpeded . jby politically-inspired demands 'for hasty action. Scci:l S:cLfriiy By: Ed Deese, Field Representative Duplin County ' -.;)'. ' j ' Are you age 62 or oider and stfU working? Have you ever'Tchecked to see if you 'might be eligible to re ceive (social security benefits! Have you ever applied for social security benefits' and been turned downs be cause, you had not, worked long enough under, social security? If so, you may now be eligible for pay ments because of, recent changes In the' law. , " ' " . , .Men may now choose to' nave their benefits begin as soon as they reach 62. However, just as in the case of a woman worker, a man who' decides 16 take his benefits be tween the ages of 62 and 65 will get less per month than he would have received at the age rot 65.-.. This works out- so that a man who takes his benefits as soon as he becomes 62 will receive hO of the monthly benefit he Would have received had he waited until he was 65, , , In deciding whether he wants to apply- for .benefits before he ' be comes 65, a man should weigh sev eral factors: for example, his heal th, family situation, and probable earning power in the Immediate fu ture. - ' , , . . , As a result of another change in the law,; less work -Js required to qualify' fof social security benefits: his !means that those people who ".oukl not quaiuy previously-, aue to lack off sufficient work undr sohial securihr'may "(now. be eBgiblef A typica): cas'e'wsfe' recehtly 'discover ed by a Social Becortty'; Office. Mrs. Smith, as we shall call Iter, had H'eeh a widow since t956. Her husband" had never worked in fern nloyment' Covered bj sficral secur ity, so there were no social security survivors beneiiis payable to her. Mrs. Smith worked in 1957 and 19 53 as a domestic employee. When c . Hist 1.IMI1' InteK In sliOi permit i .n'let I ' .ir'iwrp'V'v'f1- i Deposit las. Corp. i i . - in j l . ' - da ru in d of 1 jil -iiicv- tic cniinoyi , i i! .it slie ha ' ist 8 . i " vei ee for tl : s ' the oiiiy y siiJ 1 r i social sec ui . Accoi Jii .i . Ijw In eflect at i :t times'ie v" i 16 quarters to get Vienelils. . In 'August of Lul, however, the social security wo.? requiremei.ts l- - .--'--wed by amendments to the Social Security Act.' As a result s. bmith now needed only 8 quarters to be in sured. She read about the change in the law. and got in touch with ier Social Security Office asain. She was awarded benefits beginh ing 1981; the f irstrtnonth -tor which the change was effective. " If you believe (hat any of these changes in the- law may apply to you, please Contact the Social Sec urity District Of flee 1 located at 311 E. Walnut Street tn Goldsboro." ' "Give me liberty or give me death" are not the only words ot Patrick Henry' that go ringing down the years. He also said, "He is the greatest patriot who stops the most gullies.'.' -',V .r,(- ! Fecililies Ideal For Church School, Youth and - Famil Groups SKATING , Afternoon ' Goldsboro f - - 4 " i i Babl. iwurlli M-hemlali Si 4: S'.IS, . Ocvaljutml Keutl HAl(n ... . L::! Lesson for September 1, 19C2 MAfwhj.uw:eds In doing wiiii '0 w has ever done before ts a g-3t ma., provided what be dtt 4s worth doing. A mn V.-n- jiici-e?d where others - iiave failed, -Is even greater . j agsln supposing that what he does s a good thing to j do. Nehemiah was such t man. He . i would be a sue- j est anywhere, I ! and not only , at - - the time sat) place . Lrturemsn where be Bved, The first we hear of him, he is a member of the royal court in wna is now Iran, the ancient Persia: H was evidently t man the king . trusted, one to whom the king; gave, much pWer. Yet be was orui of the down-trodden Jews, as they were, at that time. Nehemiah him self U a .fine example of what . happened to the Jews who were taken into captivity. They were not put into dungeons, only some ef the more prominent ones tuf v fered that fat Most ' wer left' ' - to sink or swimV and being Jews thair aonomllv ivtm. Nohmiliin - showed how far they could rise tf ' they bad the chance. - ' TbS Tims and the Mat n 't ' t " A glance at the calendar helps . us to understand the genius of "this man. It was now about 140 tt-m Ta.i.Dnlum 'nll hfaali destroyed, or 90 years after the' Temple had been started. But in -all that time no one had ever suc ceeded in getting a stable govern-' ment in Jerusalem cr' lo- build practical prate ttlon-against their numerous euomi-In those days wall around it; V-it'lin 3h year the city wall hqd oea lying in ruins exactly as Nc"ou har'i.cziar,s .; primitive bull-dazers bt left it.' Tliis was Wl news to Nehemiah i-when he.ffrst Learti ji.tfj it wii. 'a ehiick.'tw). lhat tus .Otould Oe 0o;- goes to show that p-.ospcrcUS' ' ,J6wi Wn elrmiah bad,au-:tion of the Fowrty-stricken, danger filled IjveS the Jerusalem Jews ' had been living. " 1 When Nehemiah, with goversf ment backing, went to see what he could do in Jerusalem, by building the wall as his Number ' OneTiJ-OJcTI l)e! became the maa : of the hour. Five generations haj fiss(U Nehemiah had keen - needed Jong before now; but at last he arrived and took charge. r ". - t "-. ' i , i - Win W Vlllll. klliT UHU HI MM W W Knowlsd ana uadmhls . - What s . itinaUtiei that make ' a man a h o? what are the char- acteristii' - of "man of the hour"? I -miah la a very good xami;..-. . was . a successful leader, pa. t because of what -, v today vi v 'd call "know-how,' j . a pt-neati. understanding of a. situation,- an - -curate aim at the" heart of )i jblem, and sbove - all an ait in j otting people to do what th(y ought to do. Sometimes a leader-learns on the job, so to speaks as Abraham Lincoln did.' Sometimes he comes to his great tasto already knowing what to do i and how to do it. But if he neither ' knows nor can learn, he i no' leader. Nehemiah's genius lay chiefly In this: he was able to make handicaps work with him, hot against him. The people had . : always been a quarrelsome lot, as the Old Testament shows ium There were many cross-currents -of Jealousy In the dusty rubble-1 -filled Insignificant village that wanted to be a city again. These had defeated other men, no doubt. ', But Nehemiah put these Jeal- : pusies to work. He had the gold smiths working at one section of - that wall, and the priests some- -where else. He pitted them, against one another, and so in duced them to do their best work. ' Ltsdtrship Filth Readers may be interested in : studying the story of Nehemiah te see what were the various ways in which he showed his power of : leadership.' But -one of his quail- -ties was vital, and must not be' overlooked: Faith. The book' called by his name, though filled with action, begins and ends with prayer.-This man had faith' in himself:. Self-resnent wan nnta. ' ble quality in his make-up. He had faith In people if rightly led. 1 But first and last his faith was in -God. He could undertake the im possible because he believed God '. -willed it, and what God wills, tan h rirttlA NahAminh mat. I ah.i. v - .. ..v. ....... i dear that while he worked and plann ' i -entity would have tadcti. .. undertakings miscar-' ried, if he i ad not been sustained Sy the C 1 is whom he constantly rusted. ' ' - 4Baii,4 a ntltn.B pjrrfrhMi ' ht Ii,lnifn ChrlatlM CaaeaUaa, ' Jalloaat CoaoeU af lha Chareku af brUl la tin U. I. A. Belaaaa k, 'aMaiaaJir Prfaa a.rvica.) . ? . t t : . '- t. : ' -' - - ' C! ..... 0. . n.