Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Sept. 10, 1964, edition 1 / Page 12
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rtmtomm. (minm offlci am poiktin4 aunt xhanoviu 0. n. c. ruth P. orady. mamimi eoiton ??comd Cum pmtam pais at Konanoviua. n. c. a tiucphonk ? klwawmm 11. cuv in4iti ? nmmt amumi a duain County jomnal. dcvotod to tms muowiw. natorial. boucationav. i | ooonomic ano aomcwltunaa. bwbohioh op dupun county. | dupun ano aojoinino Comma iuiwnbii in nootn canouna ? MOO. vbao ? Moo. vbar " 0i.7o o.so b.?0 am | tak o 11 tax mt i? i 1.01 o.oi o.so 4.04 Owtoioo Nootn Canouna ? MOO. yban V; *0.70 o.oo SCRIPTURE FOR THE WEEK: My days are swifter than a weaver's shuttle. - Job t:U. THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK: He who will have no judge but himself condemns himself. ? H. O. Bohn. Barry And Changing Bedfellows Major newspaper editorial support in presidential elections has gone tor many years to Republican candidates in the Uni ted States. Such was the case four years ago when Richard M. Nixon ran against John P. Kennedy. But this year is shaping up as a sharp de parture from the condition, he normally Re publican Kansas City Star endorsed President Johnson the other day. This past weekend R was joined by the Houston Post and the Dallas Times-Herald. The Houston paper has not supported a Democratic nominee since Fraklin D. Roose velt The Dallas publication backed Nlxoa four years ago. Both downplayed the signi ficance of Johnson's home base in their de cisions Their emphasis was on Johnson's quaHficaMons and his performance since President Kennedy's death. On die other hand, nothing said or done by either Goldwater or Johnson has shakes the position of the Chicago Tribune, a long time GOP stalwart. It endorsed Goldwater right after the San Francisco convention and reprinted the endorsement editorial for good measure after the Democrats met in Atlan tic City. Despite the Tribune's entrenchment in the Goldwater camp, most signs point to a preponderance of newspaper support for the Democratic tickett this fall. That may not distress Goldwater. for Harry S. Truman and John F. Kennedy proved that a presiden tial candidate can win against heavy news paper opposition. But if nationwide polls of the people's sentiment at this point are accurate, die papers switching to Johnson are in the rare position of agreeing with a majority of the voters. In seeking to give the voters a more pro nounced choice, the Republican delegates apparently touched off a new kind of echo ?Charlotte Observer. Making The Choice Clear The Senate did the country a good turn in this election year 1964 by passing a medi cal care tor the aged program to be financ ed under Social Security. The bill, the so called Medicare Plan, still faces an uncer tain tote in a House-Senate conference com mittee. But already, a least the issue of Democratic Party concern for old people all over America is more clearly drawn. And President Johnson, whose urging prompted Senate passage, will one day sign this bill Into law. Hie program is a meager one and ought to be no issue at all. And it would be little tonne indeed this election year except for the extreme right wing voice which now speaks for the Republican Party. Of course. Senator Goldwater voted against this mea sure. He has made a cult of such votes. It should be remembered that he also voted against the I960 Kerr-MHls Act, a similar but far less adequate measure that to date Is useless even in this State which adopted It more than a year ago by putting up $750, 000 in matching funds. Under the Medicare Plan nearly 90 mil lion Americans past the age of 65 could re ceive some measure of relief from the astro nomical costs of prolonged illness. The ai? gument that such relief will cost too much In Social Security taxes is the same as say ing the plight of these old people is very great. Senator Goldwater made a hurried airplane trip across the country to cast his vote for ignoring the problem. President Johnson has been quitely working behind the scenes to advance this humane and good sense approach to relieve the plight. The people do indeed have a choice to make In November, and never before has the choice been so appealing to decent instincts. ?The News k Observer State Revenue "Looks Good" Steady gains in state revenues again for last month continue to point to the fact North Carolina's economy is still on the op In figures released the other day by State Revenue Commissioner Sneed High, the General fund and Highway fund show ed substantial gains over the same month a year ago. The general fund reflected an larreaae of better than 10 per cent, which Is a sizable and reassuring gain; and the hl^ percentagewise. Speaking of the general fund increase. Commissioner High said the state's ecouomy "looks good". IBs description is most apt, sad, indeed, allowing for the natural ten dency to understatement by financial ex | parts and the like, we would say the eco aomy is even better than merely "looking North Carolina revenues have gained steadily almost on a month-to-month basis over the past few years, There is nothing In tight to indicate a reversal of the trend or that gains will level off in the near future. On this basis, the state should, again, bo banding up a substantial surplus for the cur rent fiscal year. If so. expanded services to the people such as assuring the growth and develop ment of community colleges, capital impro vements for other institutions learning, and continued emphasis on public school im provement should be considered. There Is also the possibility that if state revenues continue to result in large sun pluses, the General Assembly will have an obligation to coosider the reduction of some tax schedules for Tar Heels. ?The Wilmington Star Uncle Pele From Chittlin Switch DEAR MISTER BI/IivK: Me and my otd lady, m they ?ay in the papers, "obeerved" our 45th wedding anniversary last week We "observed- t just like the other 44. by gttinc up and Marti* the morning We've got ale* pritty good hood ' the try lag pan. That's a migh ty pan way tar a married coo ple la start off the day. I learned 48 year ago that If I didn't Uka my old lady's cook lag. to oat tt with gusto, aa they say oa the society pagaa. I also learned ata? shoot 48 year ago they atol no pare sat age b a feller arguing with Ms wilt, aa the old saying gens, you can cane op with a ton si logic and shall beat you tears^And^ I^atot^newer been * ? ?' ? lady does the talking at tay houae and I do tha listening and Fn found thla to bo a fer'married'ceaplaeOat atal fitting f?-"t too good. Incidental, family life has changed a heap since I waa a boy. l*n always reading in the has kidnapped a younfaa or 5jiw?''ae?WhaaH STof a ?S 3L^5?d% 'ad^S Uy. Md they was always a P bahyaoilai from about the Ml f year ol marriage up till tha f Nth And when I waa ? b?y , the tether uaad hla bait to hold i Ma panta up and hla kids down, f Timaa haa changed. 80 haa the ' kids. | Marine on to bigger things. I 1 see bp the papers where the ' Democrats and the Prr"*1*-* was te the point is the cam paign where they was accusfcg ' each other of stealing sheep. Both sides la perdictlng a de I prase ton It the ether side 1 wins. If a depression comes, 1 hope the Lord will take care of the rich. Ihe pore knows how to take care at their selves. t I ob the other party, and when they gtt in the elites both take* credit far the bit prosperity in the nation. And second, U you see some feller walking down the Hglnray with a bundle on his back, the "outs" has won the election and the "tm" was coming home from the public trough. In November I aim to watch the highways. It's faster than gitthig the returns on T. Tour truly, Uncle Pete SATURDAY SESSION SENATOR SAM ERVIN * SAYS * When Comress reconvened on August At. the le?islstive calendar found action complete on most Presidential reouests. Of those remaining, however, three dresented highly contro versial issues, each a bar to adjournment. These were: the perennial controversy over the foreien aid lycram, a rider to this bill which is known as the Mansfield-Dirksen proposal to errant "stavs of Federal court orders" at the request of State legislative bodies facing reapportionment problems, and a medical care nlnn that has since been attached to the Sen ate version of the House-oass ed social security amendment mill. Legislative battles have a rsen over each of these nnes tions. But if these issues have formed a hurdle for adfourn ment. appropriation bills have moved along much more rapid ly than last year. Only one reg ular and one supplement ap propriation bill require further action. These are the foreien aid appropriation and the cat chall supplemental appropria tion for agencies showing em erengcy needs not orovided in the regular appropriation meas ures. Bible Facts OfInterest * By: Ella V. Prtdgen Sabbath ? A Day of But We need a day in which to be quiet, and to mediate upon deeper meaning of our Hves (Rot. MO) "I waa in the Spir it on the Lord's day, and I heard behind me a loud voice like a trumpet laying, write what you aee in a book and (end to the seven churches." If the Pharisees had listened to the voice of God speaking through his prophet Ifieah, they would have remembered that what God requires is only that men shall do justice, over kindness, and walk humbly with Him. Certainly God knew what every wise man knows today. If human beings are born with a knowledge of God and His will, something would have to be done periodically to recall this knowledge to their minds or they would ut wbi made to benefit man -man's eternal Spirit The best part of man is his Spirit. His Spirit of love, obedience, loyal ty, self-sacrifice ? theee never die. When Sunday becomes mere ly a day of pleasure, it ceaass to be a day of mat The Jaw* ish Sabbath (Gen. Ml The Creation story is the creaiton of the Sabbath Day by God Himself, as a day of rest. 7th day. 'Read Duet) T>e Israe lites were to ubesive the 7th day to remember their de liverance ^from^atovesy^ Our The eleven regular and four supplemental and disaster ap propriation bills which have cleared both houses provide funds totaling $89.7 billion for the fiscal year 1965. Foreign aid, when acted upon, will complete the regular appro priaitons calendar. The Senate has been debating the foreign aid authorization request since August 3. The House-passed version of this bill calls for $3.3 billion and represents a $300 million cut in the Admini stration request. As matters stand now, it ap pears that this year's appro priations are likely to approxi mate last year's. The first ses sion of the 88th Congress made regular and supplemental ap propriations of $914 billion. The totals for the same appro priaiton categories this session are likely to be around $98.0 billion assuming that final ac tion on the foriegn aid bill ap proximates the House figure. Not reflected in these amo unts is the item of interest on the national debt which is em braced in a separate category which is called "Treasury dis bursements of permanent funds." In 1963, this item a mounted to $10.1 billion. This year the Kern is expected to rise sharply to $11.1 billion. The rise in national debt interest costs is significant, and will represent a major budget pro blem for the foreseeable fu ture. Senate - House differences over medical care under the social security program and Mate legislative reapportion mment represent the yet unresolved questions of the session. Even with these is sues settled, foreign aid is still of such controversial nature that it could trigger a long de bate to keep Congress in ses sion for a considerable period. YEARS AGO I heard a tons * that hae a fixed place la my saaftbe aoag aad the aeog itself The words ran like this "In the sweat (loom of this I wander through the paths ear feet hare trod. And still aloof the dear familiar way Grow the blue aster aad the foldenrod." BUt we Mid insi aepiemoer u not distinguished only by eaten and goldenrod. It haa atarner re mind ert than romance. It waa on the third day of September, IMS, that the aecond World War began and it waa certainly the moat hor rible war that haa decimated mankind. It will be remembered that Labor Day cornea in September, thie year on September 7. On tho same day falls the Jewish New Year. On this day it may be noted that Yom Kippur will be observed on the 14th of September. Then on September 22 will come a day that we trust can bo hailed by the multiplied thou sands who have sweltered through an exceedingly hot summer ? the beginning of fall. But some times even September plays us false and is very hot at times. But still I am for September for on the twentieth day of that month I was born. GANcmnra girl . . . Striking Sue Abb I wriw pertnqmd gangster's girlie TV IMIIflllllllB et -n? 0(0*11 BY LINDA NORRIS Offi OF the fint to introduce surf music with his Surfer's Choice LP, Dick Dale's latest is Summer Surf ... In the album, be offers many of the tunes that have become favorites at Santa Monica, California's Aragon Ball room, where Dale and His Del Tones play each week . . . There are also a few innovations ? Spanish Kiss, for example, intro duces Dale and his new Fender Kins Accoustical Guitar and Feel So Good features him playing the sax and harmonica between vocal choruses . . . Among the others on the album are Banzai Washout, Glory Wave and Thunder Wave. Ike Weirdos and Mr. Gasoer come up with a real weirdo in Surfink ... This group previously confined their wild vocals to hot rods (Bods 'n Ratfinks and Hot Rod Hootenanny), but now they get their feet wet with Surfink (that's a rat fink on a surf board) . . . The album, in addition to theme songs of the surfink (Finksville, U.S.A., Surfer Ghoul, Ratfink High and There's a Dog Gone Ding in My Ding-Dong Board) contains membership cards in the Rat Fink Fan Club for those desirous of becoming the biggest all-around finks in their communities. And still on the surf scene, Surf Route 101 features Gary Usher and the Super Stocks . . . The album offers a collection of vocals rod instrumental^ that cover Newport Beech, Balboa Rodondo Reach Mus cle Beech Party . . . Then there's Jerry Gale and His Spacemen with their latest, Surf Age .. . After two successful hot rod al bums, Cole ventures into surfing for the first time with notable results. 7 W> WrMTMT MTU AN* rVtNT* HMD THTmUM Hm laat tattle of the AmHcu Revelation was (a?U at Fart Heary, Wheeled Waal Tlrgtaa, September 11, im Ite National Prohibition Party waa aquM la Chicago, Sep tember II, IMS. Then waa a tarrlSc eruption of Mt Btna, SMly, S.|H1ir 1* 1?U- ^ IS, ISK ly SrtawaiSf s?f HijtiWl'r Tt, SsSf"1" r***,V? * P*,?n, Great Britain aai Ha celaalaa adopted the Gregorian Calendar tapirtir 14, 170. Pridlmi William McKlaley died, leplomhet 14, 1ML ZZ S225L2I **yf,, rwTy to*fc ^ _ I UWMJWUIWI ' IWifciifc * ' 0 lr 1 I^KTaV i ^ ACROA8 DOWN 18. Oom- B*fMgMMB|HH ;E? 1S- "ST fflHi 10 Bend S. Mora old- 18. God. forth fashioned: fcn 11. Cut, as the roast 1. Lifted dawn 13. Vacillate with effort 30. Drags kllElXKfclAffBei 14. Pro- 4. Variety of 33. Brief ?fcPP^gElgWM priotors corundum re 10. Wrath 5. Bench-like mark 17. Medieval mat 30. foot 38. Sailors tala ?. Wins digit 37.Booome poem receptacle 28. Restore liable to 15. Produced 7. Black 30. Hot and 38. Edible 31. A slant and blue dry bulbs 23. Author of 8. Cubic 30. Most 43. Solitary "The Gold meters rational 44." pro Bug" 11. Mountain 83. Bitter vetch nobis" 34. Ger. Black passes 34. Skinned 40. Ts^ 85.525 W? I11* 1+ Wtf I4 I* I6 Wi rr.v^g %- ^ m=T W- lr p 3ir ? a2Sth n JAKumlerer. P ^ *?Tl r 2: SEE I 43. A duck rr hunter's 5/ F? lovr* ~SL " P*1 47 chapter ? # ? w*l M ia?l hi PUZZLE NQ, 828 ' ? I , ! !?JUIIiM011WLIJlJJIl.Jl!, ? I m*L*1 mmmr Sz my husband and I had our flrst Modal T Ford. It was our prise and the envy of all our friends. He had to crank It to atari and put the curtains up when it rained. In 1830, we decided to take a trip to Colorado. It took us a week to get there. We slept the flrst night on the banks of the Neoshio River and had to have the cylinders worked on the next morning in Neoshio Rapids. There were no motels or cabins in those days. We were fortunate enough to stay in two hotels in Kansas, but mostly we stayed in camp parks which did have ovens and out door toilets. It rained every dsy on and off and the rivers and creeks were flooded. The roads were all mud and sometimes we had to drive through pastures. One day several ears, including ours, had to be pulled out of the mud. At Deerfield, Kansas, we slept on the floor above a garage which had a tin roof and the hail was terrible. (?mt ??trtl??!??? to Ihia ntoaa to Tfc. nu fl.?. to. *1*. tonUari. Kr.t IVWW MTW pVTMMMf WlW AM mra of keWwuJ 1. He was David in movie "David and Bathsheba." -?????? ? r:|*n ^ ? ?S vrtgofy rtcK, witn rora. 2. Female surf rid?r in Kildarn ? episode "Tyger, Tyger." |JMmaA I AIJBL V||aAAA |w ?MMWI kfi^n. i Tviiv mimigwA? Judy Garland. 3. Unemployed actor in "Game with Glass Pieces." Peter Folk. George Peppard. Joih#i Mason. 4. Distraught father in "Are There Any More Out There Like You?" Red Nichols. Robert Ryan. Laird Cregar. 5. Star of "Davy Crockett's Keelboat Race." g- jPj.il. ? AM J,, P rffftl MIIBjf VPfliTllfl? Buck Jones. 'UDJ OU I ?IfA* A|pjOI( l ?uijjauiot ? E -'jaipiOM luanb -?jj ? y 'pad** ? 9 ^tOX 'jaifjoj uoXjj -pjoddaj -xnaiuiiw -13*d SBMSNV Trade at Howe^i^) ICPJJitJ? r^1 BEWARE THE ADVICE YOU GET FROM OTHER RETIRED PEOPLE SSDETIBED PEOPLE Should not go to other retired peo ple for their advice," says Mr. Hugh W. Bromley, a newly re tired retail man who tried it. "They shouldn't even place too much faith in what other retired people voluntarily tell them. It's frequently the most unreliable in formation you can get. . ." "About a year before 1 got my pension I started talking to re tired friends, trying to get a line on what to expect," he says. "I don't think one of them told me the truth. If the friend was living in a certain ana of Florida, I was assured it was the perfect place to retire to and that I should move In. The same from two friends in California. The same from one friend ' hen in Missouri " Mr. Bromley believes people who move to hew towns when they retin have to protest that the towns an perfect. They're stuck with them, for one thing," be explains, "because they usu ally cant afford to move back. But aon Importantly they've got to save face ? they cant let people think they made a mistake." He would ask these Mends how they wen getting by on their pensions. He knew roughly what some ef them wen getting and thought he oould use their an S&sbssssss IS'JLfcXtX S 2Z Always Cm. How did they <ui up the long kmrsof the day? Oh, that was no problem . . , then was al ways men to do than they had time for "these Mends wennt miarop- j resenting things because of any evil intent," Mr. Bromley insists. "They were just saving face. Somehow people think they have to when they are retired. Some of my friends actually were do ing line on their money, and with the towns where they moved. But the point is that Whether they were or not they would always say they were. You just can't be lieve them ... I know." With that off his chest, Mr. Bromley wanted to talk about his "Bromley Wardrobe" for retired men. It consists of three parts, work clothes; 100-hours-e-year clothes; and living clothes. The work clothes are two pairs of denim slacks, two heavy no iron shirts, and two pairs of darned socks. He keeps them on a nail by the washer In the base ment, and every Monday throws one set in the washer. "My 100-hours-a-year clothes are my two business suits, white shirts and ties. And 100 hoars a year la all they're needed In the average retired man's Ufa . . . for church, parties, and every thing. This means 50 hours per year par suit, and they'll last me 10 years If my wife can make some minor style changes from time to time." Mr. Bromley's living clothes are his most Important. They In clude three pelrs of slacks ? one light, one dark, one medium; three pairs of shorts In the same colors; six sports shirts ? three with buttons and three slipovers, all In solid colors ranging from white to black. "This gives you -PWtfnn vm-te^s not to become iSssfes
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1964, edition 1
12
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