me: CIRCULATION '2 250 - :l:en Po:: Reported; Carr Cautions Parents a cases - of chicken r. pox i '-an reported from the Becdtad of the ' Wallace school, It announced yesterday by Dr. .. Carr, Puplln County Health r. Dr. Carr pointed out that n pox is no of the most - ious of communicable disea- arid urged parents to watch j- children carefully and to nw thnf show an ual eruption. -The yery first e 01 tne xiiseaae m w i.. nafinH thierc- Uljf VWUK5ivp ; u it Is common for It to spread rough a schoolroom or school ( ire it is started, and the coopera- ta a rcnllpBted tO PrC- v- t tills occurrence. - All: cfeS ; .is.. :d be reported at, once w u health department. The first symptoms of chicken pox may be headache, generalized aching, or general bad feeling, or the eruption may appear tirst. This comes out in crops and ly appears first on the face. The importance "of this disease is due to the fact that It may be .con fused with mild smallpox. Pr. Carr states that this outbreak of chick en pox should serve to call atten tion to parents that all children froing to school should bei vacci nated against small pox unless iiey have .had a recent successf ul vaccination.- - ',. r .;' HOSTESSES SUB DEB CLUB Misses Hazel and Lois William soh were the ': hostesses of the Kenansville Sub Deb Club Satur day night Plans for a Thanksgiv ing Dance were made. -After the i tona ifliamiaaed. tembtiniT refreshments, were served, consists ing of pear salad ana mn. .raw with whipped cream. Members pre sent were: Hazel and Lois William niroo wnikmi. Rtllie Pickett. Catherine Sykes, Doris Dobson and Caroline Jerntx. , . v A ' rf7 , 'kenANSVPXE. North Carolina , , , PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY u , , I ;, THURSDAY. NOV, 28ta, 1935 , yUMBER 24 Football Team Guest ntrv Clnh. Warsaw TJast Monday Night t Utoto RphOOl FOOt- Mil Squad celebrated 1 the end .of successful year at 'ui"v;.:';: to their honor Monday evening at i-xi-.mooi in Warsaw, by the WarsenaSyille W A long table reaihh.g the f ull len; etn o w uuu"8 - , ? ..." . with rosea and ferns linked together with chains of evergreen vine. . tHt ot thn meeting in motion'by raising the tune "Amer ica" and all joinea in ucjr. F. U Goodman led the invocation. : i MiiMimA inner xol- lowed and took a prominent part on the program. . Chairman Strickland caiieo ui t.i.. t tnr tha Address Of Wei- mmn Jake introduced the boys with fitting words of praise -.and ..m t,o miM hnrdiv understand why Warsaw naa noi w tionedr in any oi mo . iwo talks. - . , rt- ImaIoiI thn Dro- ram in a modest way, remarktag that because or nis - sukv things were pusnea on on tb. hnva to nlav football .ttd ffet - strone enough to keep from being Imposed upon.; , ? r t 'Tnhnsnn Bnnkf) (ill fOOtball as he saw it, and sal that he felt that the financial. bupi. " hardest to get. Hiving seen the boys in two games, O. P. spoke of the clean play and fine sportsman ship. You are closing pie year with a clean record the speaker con cluded. '',' v' ' ''" , Tommie Greshem, Mayor of Warsaw, - representing the town and especially his own personal In terest in the team, addressed them as a gentlemenly squad. Football THE TIMES COVERS DUPLIN IJKE , wittst AKSVILLE. North Carolina 1 EARLIEST SNOW IN - ' - v MANY YEARS HERE . - o ' f m. mniid Ml. A anan of the season struck here lai Friday when the thermometer siarteu imhllnr anil hrmipht flurries of snow by Saturday morning and freezing weatner oaiuruay w ternoon. ,s ' nu : Tiimm around Kenans ville say It Is the first time snow has been seen ln.uese puna m many years. Several sections of Eastern Carolina reported ra ther heavy falls but due to the warmth of tne atmospnere ana earth It melted almost time it hit the ground. , builds vou for the future by train ing in team work. As you go into any ana every proiessiou ju need team work or cooperation anv .rmi hoira loomed that on the foot- JVW . ball field. Tommie spoke of the olean personal record or me yiay ers during the season, living up to idaai annrtHmnnuhlD. You are a cre dit to your town and even though we are ratner reserved m iira ing ourselves, yet we as a town are proud of you, and are satisfied with your achievements. Coach C. Li Dennis spoke on tne value of football ln-llf e. It develop es the body. In order to play you have had to train ana , ieu.ru i make all parts of your body work together. The football fatalities of today axe mostly among the "sand lot teams" which have had , no training. Ydtt are building a body that you can use in life. Football calls for alert minds. When a sig nal is called, you must learn your part In that play and be ready to carry it out. Your opponents ap preciate good sportsmanship, which you learn In the game, and which you .will eeo as you iace me.. j Robert Pridgeni from the squad spoke oh what he had learned from playing the game. It trains- one to work with others in a spirit of i cooperation which Is necessary out -side of the foot ball field in every walk of life. It developes a strong body and makes one iee gova ue- 1 ,. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Equal To A Will ,; Rogers "Ropin Em In This saving made- by Capt J, E. Jerritt at the' Rotary Meet-' lng Monday night Is certainly a portrayal of good r horse-sense philosophy. - , ' ' "They used to make the roads wide enough for two cars to run on and some time they would run together and smash up', but now they are making the "roads wide enough for several cars so 'sev eral cars can get' In the .smash up at the same time. , . ' cause of a well takencare of phy sique. IV demands an alert mind, which is carried i over jinto- the classroom work, i, , : .T ..TArrlttwnn rAllpd nn tn din. crlbe the football game as played In "The Good Old Days". We used nn emilnmflnt. fnr hndv Tirntpptlnn in those days,' the Capt. said, and oiien ooys wouia , appear on tne field fully dressed, even' to plug hats, and if one happened to get smashed in the . on-rush, then the game would . nave to cease until (More on back page) - THANKSGIVING "Therefore will I give thanks unto thee, O LORD, among the heathen, and sing praises unto thy name." - PSALMS, 19:49. HISTORY does not-record that the day was particularly cold . . . . though we may assume, from Longfellow's description of Miles Stan dish's graying locks, "Like hedgerows faj November," that some snow did fall. ... , ' The turkeys, so lately disturbed in their favorite haunts by over noisy blunderbusses, were roasted to a turn, surely. And of cranber ries, corn, pumpkin, squash, grapes and apples, we know there was a goodly supply, j . - " Certainly, there was a miracle to commemorate the occasion. For, about the plain yet bounteous board were men whose gods were other miHa (i a ..mIIIta tfclo rinA 4-A nrVirm thai, titata nva thonlra ia thov U1I.1I.V I...'.. . f.V'... bU.a. .VM wMf H vuu themselves were unlike those who entertained them. Much time) has passed since 1621. Thanksgiving, set apart from all other days by proclamation of the President and the governors of the various states, will be observed according to the precedent set by Presi dent Lincoln in 1864, on the last Thursday in November. It will be observed hy many as a holiday; by some, as an act of f.aa .it 11 1 ' a tr 1 irl n v thanbn W if Sjfi? " '"' ... ,iv i - - u - i 1 H f - ' ' fir : "I M'yv . XI 1 A ROOF NEWS VIEWS , , V WITH THE EDITOR, "So Red The Rose" appearing at the Duplin Theatre next Mon day, Tuesday and Wednesday is a real Southern show that real "Southerners wi'J want ; to see. Stark Young's novel by the same name has been one of the nat ion's best sellers this year and the screen adaptation promises . to be one of the season's hlts,es peclaUy in the South, The World fremler showing was held week before last In the capitols of ele ven Southern States. It was bo oked for a four day run In Ral eigh but was held over for an ex tra two days. The cast is predominated by native Southern actors and ac tresses with the exception of Walter Oonnolly who takes a leading part the Others are nat ive Southerners. Margaret Sul lavan, star of the picture was NOTED AUTHORS PEN SAGA QF born lit Virginia and Is a direct descendant of v Robert E. Lee. Randuph Scott, Miss Sullavan's new leading man Is also a native of Virginia and received bis edu cation at the University of North Carolina. Harry EUerbe Is a na tive of Georgia while Miss Eliza beth ratterson nana irons sa vannah, Tennessee. rm nnndinir of Kenansville, Farrior and WUliams, of Warsaw and County Heaitn ornoer ur. n. L. Carr are attending a series of lectures on Obstetrics being given In Raleigh by Dr. J. R. McCord of Atlanta, me leciures are uemg nnnanrsd hv thp State Board Ol Health ,the North Carolina and Wake County Medical societies. Dr. Carr is only attending part time. o Many of our citizens will be traveling today, quite a few will be hunting while some wO be at home. It Is well to keep in mind during any holiday season that road traffic is neavier man us ual and If proper caution is taken by each driver there will be less accidents. This also may apply to those who are roaming the woods hunting. Drive Carefully! o Dr. Carr gave a general physi cal examination to students in the B. F. Grady school on Wednesday of this week. Last week he gave the examinations to Beulaville students. o Morris Flshbein, doctor "Long-haired aogs aeveiup i o bies lass frequently than short haired dogs." "Hotel accomodations are lousy the bugs and fleaa have me cov ered with' bites and sores, and the food is enough to poison a goat." OLD SOUTH Threo nntstnndinir writers in the world of fiction and the theatre collaborated on the new fara mount romance, "So Red The Rose' coming to the Duplin Theatre on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nf next week. Margaret Sullavan is tne star, and tne supporting cast includes Randolph Scott, Wal ter Connolly, Janet Beecher', Harry HiiierDe ana lizaDem raiLeiauit. First credit goes to Stark Young, who wrote ttw novel "So Red The Rose," which for a year now has retained its spot on the list of national best sellers. A Southerner by birth, Mr. Young recreated a romance of that time in our history known as the War between the States. With understanding and sympathy he has told a story of young love in those turbulent days when men and women stood stead fast for the things in which they believed. The screen version of this novel was intrusted to two well known writprn TjlWrAnne StflllinS. CO- l author of "What Price Glory" and ifidwin Justus Mayer, wno wrote "Children of Darkness" and "The Firebrand." Margaret Sullavan plays the role of Vallette Bedford, the hero ine of the story; Randolph Scott is cast as Duncan, her sweet heart; Walter Connolly creates the role of Vallette's kindly fa ther; Janet Beecher portrays Val ptte's mother, and Elizabeth Pat terson is cast as the cruty Mary rt-rrv; the impoverished and pe culiar relative of the Bedford fa mily. The director of "So Red the Rose" was King Vidor, maker of many past successes including "The Big Parade" and "Our Daily Bread." Laura Comstock, dietician: "A person can do a much better day's work on a good breakfast." ; i,' X if ; ' V .Vf i , 5 ' f 4 ' f 1 : i k ?! t ( 4 I 'J

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