mil! Well! Wells By: RUTH fe. WELLS ? Speaking of progress, in some respects. BeulavQle is a most amazing town. Yesterday I at tended ground breaking ser vices at the Presbyterian Church. The Methodist Church held services in their church for the first time in 1964. The Free will Baptist have their lot cleared ready to start con struction following a fire. The Baptist church in Beulaville Is In the planning state of a new sanctuary, within the next few years I feel sure they will have lour new churches, isn't that fantastic? * ? ? ? The Tln.es Office will never be thesam^ Happy is dead! Hap py was Margaret's pet dog, but she was also much more than that. About press time, Happy was usually at the office. She came to the front door and gently let her presence be known. Always entering after a lady, she came In to the "run of the shop." After making the rounds to see Just what everyone was doing, she usually stretch ed out to take a nap In the hall, the most out-of-the way piece she could find. Nor did she de sen. no metier how lete the midnight oil wes burned. I hope there is e newspaper shop In the Happy Hunting Ground. If ?o Happy is at the from door, taking a nap and standing guard st the same time. ? ? ? ? My friend, Mrs. Elery Guth rie Drought me a clipping from a Newspaper dated July 22,1862. The name of die paper has been removed but a most Interesting ad about "Greens bo rough Fe male College. Greens borough, N. C." Most interesting to me were "Charges per session of Five Months. Board, $62.60; Tuition In regular course $20.00 Latin $6.00; French $10.00; Oil Painting $20.00; Drawing, $5.00; Music on Piano or Gui tar, $20.00; Use of Instruments, $2.50. Board in Advance; Tui tion at the end of the session." That was the good old days! ? ? ? ? The urge to travel overcame my friend, Mrs. Blanche Wll son, of Warsaw, last week. Her residence now b Hoxeyvllle Star Route, Cadillac. Michigan. That b of course temporary as she has to divide her time between here and there and there. And talk about traveling, she never breaks the speed li mit or any other law, she Just rs there. Thb trip was made the shortest lencht of time she has ever made It. Left Warsaw Thursday morning and was In Cadillac before bedtime Friday, "with time to spare." \ ? ? * * in connection with a high school class reunion I recent ly attended that old song "Dear Hearts and Gentle People," keeps ringing In my ears. I am not sure how many years It had been since many of of us had see n each other, we may have expected all the others to be as they were all those years ago, but all of us had chanced, for the better we a freed. Everybody had such fun Iscovering each other. Yesterday's News Notes 1 Year Ago Northeast Flood Control Pro gram Discussed by Cbmmlrtee. Miss Carolyn Knowles gra duates from Scnool of Nursing of Southeastern General Hospital. Lumberton. Josef Ann Smith of Warsaw celebrates 8th birthday. R. K. Smith, Duplin County native, now resident of Miami, Florida receives M. A. Degree at Western Carolina College, Cullowhee. 5 Years Ago Waccamaw Bank and Trust Company opens branch at Chin quapin. Cecil Miller receives Gold Medallion Award for his home. Charles Powell receives Wil liam B. Palmer Scholarship. Mr. and Mrs. waiter Lee Herring celebrate Golden Wed ding. 10 Years Ago Descendants John Wells Bo ney Hold Annual Reunion. Duplin County's assessed val uatlon is $39,850,642. J. P. Stevens Co. goes on partial shut-down for month of September. "Buddy Boy" Smith, Mary Vann Wllklns and Dewey Howard an end LRY Conference of Uni versalis! Church in Ferry Beach, Soco, Maine. 20 Years Ago Tobacco Holiday Declared, Market to re-open after five day holiday. Typhoid Clinic held In Duplin Oxinty. Spare Stamp No. 49 good for 5 lbs. sugar, expires August 31. For Sale, 3 young mules, weight about 1100 lbs. each, and one new two horse hackney wagon, at right price. Warsaw. SENATOR SAM ERVIN * MVS * | ? WASHINGTON - Crime Is rampant and rising In our land. News media relate an endless stream of criminal activity. The latest FBI statistics substan tiate this picture with graphic details. According to these sta tistics, since 1960 the volume of crime in the United States has risen 46 percent while the population has grown only 8 percent. The chronicale of crime in the Uiited States for 1965 is as follows: serious crimes, 2. 780,000, an increase of 6 per cent over 1964; murders, 9 850, an increase of 6 percent over 1964; forcible rapes, 22, 740, an Increase of 9 pec em over 1964; robberies, 118,920, an Increase of 6 percent over 1964; aggravated assaults, 206, 700, an Increase of 6 percent over 1964; grand larcenies, 762, 400, an Increase of 8 percent over 1964; and auto thefts, 486, 600, an Increase of 5 percent over 1964. There Is much bewilderment In the public mind about what to do about crime, what It means, and where It may end. Citizens write me: "What is causing this crime wave?" There could be many answers From Our Readers Seven Springs, N. C. To; Duplin Times I hope everyone in "Our" County of Duplin will support James Sprunt Institute in every way they can. Also. "Our" Duplin General Hospital. Both of them will mean so much toward the economical development of our county, and further industrial development of "Good Ole Duplin" too. Lets everyone of us go out and vote for the enlargement of our hospital this coming Sa turday. Ben Frank Outlaw Seven Springs, N. C. to that question, but reduced to simple terms there is a real need for public support of law and order. For that matter, there is real need for public support of law cutu vi uti uy me ^uvci uiiraua themselves and tnelr highest officials. This is particularly true of our courts. This Is no time for judges to allow an excessive ana visionary soli citude for the accused to blind their eyes to the reality that the victims of crime and so ciety Itself are as much en titled to justice as the ac cused. It is likewise no time for Judges to let an excessive and visionary solicitude for the accused to prompt them to usurp and exercise power they do not possess and Invent new rules to turn loose upon society self confessed criminals. The Supreme Court's Miran da decision handed down two months ago is the latest step in the journey which the ma jority of the Supreme Court Justices began in McNabb v. U. S. and Mallory v. U. S.. and continued in Escobedo v. Illinois. By degrees the Court has handcuffed police officers In their dealings with criminal suspects and criminal defen Duplin County Churches Advent Christian Church By: Ruth B. Wells The only Advent christian Church in Duplin County Is located at Potters HOI. a few hundred yards from Highway 41 across the road from me old Potters HOI school building. The records have been lost and no definite date of organi zation can be given, it Is known that It wis In existence 76 years ago at least. It began as ajemor ??bush arber^revtval building for worshipping until a^atnictiOT j*as erected on After a fewyears this building was not sufficient so an extra piece was added. This was used until 1944 when It was outgrown and a new church was built on the present site. A parsonage wu built In 1964. Since that time there has been a full time pas tor. The attendance steadily grew so In 1956 a Sunday School annex was added. By 1965 there once more was needed addi tional space, so another annex was bulk. There are 192 on the Sunday School roll with an average attendance of about 190. There are 194 active members on the church roll, 89 men and 105 women. There are several youth sponsored by the womens Home and Foreign Mission Society of the church. Anyone in the vicinity looking for a church home would find a warm welcome In this "old time" country church. The pastor Is Rev. Donald Lawson (The Times expresses appre ciation to Mrs. Ernest Qulnn for her help In securing infor mation on die Advent Christian Church) -? ?i * N. C. POLITICAL PRIMER C?I "."-.v. I ONSERVATIVE:| i A MAN WHO DREAMS OF y DOING BIG ^ THINGS I . MOSTLY DREAMS l_ J cv; ".-a' SSBS F? ? * uiV I BERAL A MAM WHO IS WILLIN6 TO SPEND SOMEONE Xj4-\ ELSE'S MONEY "' . J ODERATE: j A PERSON | WHO WHISPERS WHEN OTHERS^iRE SHOUTING 1 r ?? ANATIC: ? ANYBODY WHO DISAGREES WITH YOU ON POLITICS Veterans Training Available Veteran Kenneth Williams signs up for courses at James Sprunt Institute with Dean Alfred Wells. Veterans can now further their education at James Sprunt Institute. This announcement dants. The rationale of the Miranda case Is particularly unjust to the thousands of dedicated law enforcement officers who seek to protect the lives, the bodies, the habitations, and the other property of citizens from cri minal depredations. Scores of law enforcement officers die In the performance of their duty each year In order that we may live. Yet the sum and substance of the Miranda decision over looks this in Its effort to jus tify Its erroneous opinion that a substantial percent of all law enforcement officers, who In vestigate unsolved crimes and Interrogate suspects In custody, resort to undue pressure or trickery to obtain confessions from tne suspects In custody; that In consequence, suspects comes from the James Sprunt Institute Administration and has been approved by the State Su in custody need protection from law enforcement officers who interrogate them; and that the best way to protect suspects is to surround police officers with conditions that deter suspects from making confessions or even asserting their innocence. Some law enforcement offi cers do abuse their authority, but some judges do too - es pecially when they attempt to amend constitutions and make laws rather than Interpret them. Hamstringing all law enforce ment officers because some of them err is about on a par with padlocking all courtrooms because some judges err. Law enforcement officers need the support of the govern ments that constituted them. They need this support con stantly, in tangible ways, and particularly now. pervlsor for Veterans Educa tion In the North Carolina De partment of Public instruction. These are approved under Ti tle 38. U. S. Code. Degree programs are avail able to veterans in Business Ad ministration, Accounting, Com mercial Art and Design, Exe cutive Secretary, Livestock and Poultry, Machine and Tool De sign, and Agriculture. Trade Programs are avail able to veterans In Auto Mecha nics, Auto Body Repair, Weld ing, Masonry, Radio and TV Repair, Drafting, Stenography, Electrical, Plumbing, Tile Set ting, and Carpentry. Benefits to full-time students under the veterans program range from $100.00 per month for single veterans to $150.00 for veterans with two or more dependents. Veterans should visit James Sprunt Institute at their earliest convenience In order to start proceedings on their certificate of eligibility. Slogging It Out (The following article appeared In the News week magazine quoting a Magnolia soldier In vlet Nam. Editor's note) Though it has been one of the biggest and longest sweeps of the Vietnamese war. Operation Paul Revere has not been a par ticularly spectacular one. in contrast with some recent encounters - such as Operation Hastings In which almost 200 U.S. marines and perhaps as many as 1,600 of the enemy were killed in nearly four weeks of Intense action - Paul Revere has accounted for only 786 enemy dead in the 87 days since it began. Ana for the thousands of Gl's involved in Paul Revere, their dogged pursuit of the North Vietnamese 32nd Regiment has become frustrating. Part of the trouble has been that the monsoon rains have made U.S. air sur veillance and reinforcement efforts a very chancy affair. Just how serious a difficulty this can be was shown last week when a platoon of the First Air Cavalry found itself surrounded by Nortn ? letnamese shortly after a seemingly uneventful landing in the Jungles of south Vietnam's central highlands. Immediately after the platoon's helicopters took off, the weather closed in, making reinforcement impossible. Then the North Vietnamese opened up, killing both the platoon commander and his first sergeant. "Every way we turned, they'd fire on us." recalls Sgt. Willie Glaspie of Magnolia, N. C. By the time 46 minutes had elapsed, the platoon's radic had been captured, ending all contact with the outside. "We decided ft was a lost cause," says Glaspie. "We said we would fight till we were all dead," Finally, a few members of the platoon managed to get off the landing zone into heavy cover. As they watched helplessly, the North Vietnamese overran the landing area, killing all the wounded GI's on it save three who escaped by playing dead. By the time the weather changed enough to let re inforcements come in, only nine of the original 27 air cavalrymen were alive. Among them was sergeant Glaspie, who next day went into action again with a new squad. And Paul Revere ground on. ^Tnole Pete From | M' | Chittlin Switch | i' 'if i "i ij(| ' ' "Bf j TjBilJ?i' i DEAR MISTER EDITOR: I was reading this piece in the papers where the U. 8. De partment of Labor has come out with a new book called The Dictionary of Occupational Ti tles." This piece said the book listed more than 36,000 kinds of jobs fer earning a living to day in the United States. The piece went on to say the Labor Department had found about 6,000 jobs that was brand new on account of the new kind of things they was making and selling these days. But they found about 7,000 kinds of jobs that wasn't being done no more. I reported these items to the fellers at the country store Sat urday night and Ed Doolittle was of the opinion they probable left out one way people was working to git a living. He said he had saw a piece where they made a survey some place in California that showed folks on relief in some cases spend about 40 hours a week gitting their benefits. They was working ap plying fer benefits, standing in lines, talking to welfare work ers, filling out forms and going from one place to another fer free services of different kinds Ed said this piece said in a heap of cases these folks was working harder not working than they would be working. Zeke Grubb reported he was glad to git this information and if the worst come to the worst _ he aimed to write the Labor De partment and buy one of them books. It was a mystery to him, allowed Soke, that we got 38, 000 ways of earning a living in this country and his brother-in law couldn't find a single one of them. He said this feller had been disemployed now fer a - year and was sleeping at his house and eating his vittels about half the time. Clem Webster figgered them 7,000 kinds of jobs that has dis appeared was probable due to i f automation. He was of the opin ion that this number will jump to 27,000 by the time the Labor Department gits around to com piling the next dictionery. Clem told the fellers that from what he could hear, about the only things they wasn't running with machinery in the factories to day was the labor union con tracts. He said he had advised his young grandson to go into the barber shop business on ac count of this was about the only job that wasn't liable to git eliminated by automation. Clem f t figgered they ain't never made a machine that will give a fel ler a good haircut and never will. Come to think about it, Mis ter Editor, Clem might have been giving that boy some good advice. Haircuts was $2.50 in Washington, according to the papers, and the Barbers Union in Los Angeles has announced they was going to $2.50 soon. I'm mighty glad I'm gitting more baldheaded ever day. Yours truly Uaeie Pete , ' 1 ' J Minister's ( Desk lWv! I). K. I* it rkrr?on I' VV ;ir*;iu if The man was suffering from what appeared to be a case of shattered nerves. After a long spell of failing health, he finally called a doctor. "You are In serious trouble," the doctor said. "You are living with some terribly bothersome thing; something that is possessing you from morning to night. We must find what it is and destroy it." "Ssssssh, -doctor." said the man, "you are -absolutely right, - but don't say it it so loud - she's sitting in the next room and she might hear you." How easy it is to blame our troubles and aches and pains on those closest to us. Sus picion breeds distrust. This is true as much in the home as anywhere, perhaps more so. And distrust in a home can cause much misery. Homes can be a part of hea ven Itself or it can be h?U on earth, in my years as a pastor I have had ample opportunity to observe the validity of this statement. The proper power structure of a home should be vested in a democracy. Man and wife should work together. It is a sort of a "united we stand, divided we fall" pro position. In any marriage and in any home trie little things some times count for more impor tance than the big or obvious things. Remembering birthdays and anniversaries can be im portant. But it is even more important simply to care and to express sucn care in the Incidental relationships of a home. The person who wrote the popular song a few years ago, "little Things Mean a Lot." must have been thinking about a home. Our nation has remained strong because of the solidity of our homes. But the decay of our homes in recent years places dark storm clouds on ou nation's horizon. Jane Ad dams once said. "America's future will be determined by the home and the school. The child becomes largely what It Is taught, hence we must watch what we teach It, and how we live before 11." Amen! What Is a home? It Is a world of strife shut out - a world of love shut In. It Is the only spot on earth where the faults and fallings of fallen hu manity are hidden under the mantle of charity. It Is the i < father's kingdom, the children's paradtte, the mother's world.^ It Is Where you are treated the' best and grumble the most, or at least it ought to be. I ? mmt uupnn rimes Progress Sentinel Published Weekly by Progress Sentinel, Inc. KenansvlUe, N. C. Second Class Postage Paid at Kenansville, N. C. SUBSCRIPTION' PRirrs / I Single Copy IV In Duplin and Adjoining Counties C Mos. ? SI.hi 1 Yr. ? S3 .(I Outslue Of Duplin and Adjoining Counties 6 Mos. ? S2.32 1 Yr. ? S4.M (lad. N. C. Sales Tail Outside North Carolina 1 Yr. SS.50 A Duplin County Journal de voted to the religious, ma terial, economic and agricul tural development of Duplin County. Crossword Puzzle across r r i* i* y ifc i7 wwi* '?" 1.Linking 71 T?5 * device 8. Barrel .* 88 ~ ~~ ? H ~? "? 12. Aardvark 88 15 Common"' *" 88 i "" B 3 do? " B IT ^ ffl w i? ? 16. Hasten Si I ?8 | 17. Warble "I1* Rga" ? 88 " 18. Compass _J . JBBL... ? point " |i IBMg " IS. Girl's name ? - wBBW ? 20. That man 54 88 w * M" 15: "S?S?? =4--$"-?iF SB ???? I-"?S*"?* 30. Curved ? ? n j? ? plank: naut OH 88 32. Toward ? 1 BBm bo ? ? ? ? 33. Becloud 34. Bingo 7T R SB *? 36. College I I I I WB1MH I I I I I I aegree 44. Thus 55. Region 19 Beast 37. Stop up 46. Numbers 56. Unfastener 12. Among 39. Grain 48. cheer 58. Microbe 14. Except 51. Yearn for 59. Bee's 26. Girl's name ?*? ?eh?ldl 58. Sea eagle weapon 17. Fleece 43. On the 54.Distance 18. Bcdesiastia ocean measure .... 19. Proximate DOWN 31. Long ago; ' 1. Arrived archaic Hg? &SS&U. 4. Animal 39. Unable to /V friend 41. Ardent 5. French 45. Make- ? "the" believe f 6. Of racial 4T.Cltpid 7.&S3? #8. Money 50. Qennan 9. Foreigner "mists? 11* CaStfla* '' Angsr * 13'. Paper 54. Human* manures 57 .Ymjgm.