Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Dec. 31, 1948, edition 1 / Page 5
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FRIDAY, DECL..; i 31st, 1- IJ xnc DVPLiti Tinea Mew 'Happenings, Advertising In And Around County's Eastern, Metropolis 4 arv. MSS. I. D. SANDLIN, J? jDaplla Times Correspondent m BEULAVTLLE Please Give Her Yoir Newi H. D. ClubMeets - The Home Demonstration Club ra entertained at' their annual Christmas party in the school lunch room Tuesday Dec, 21 at 7:30 p.m. "r- After a series of games and con tests the' hostesses served a deli clous concealed satad course on lettuce, crackers, coca colas and kuts. Tables were attractively ar ranged and decorated in the sea- ton' colors. Hostesses were Mes dames P. Thigpen, Lou Belle Williams, P. C. Shaw, Daisy Neth- ercutt, Jim Sandlln and Miss Lou Jackson. ' Church Women " The Women of the Church met Tuesday, Dec. 21 at 6:30 p.m. After business Mrs. Phoebe Pate gave an Interesting talk concerning the SDirit of Christmas:: ; Seven members were present. all eefs r The ladies Auxiliary of the Free Will Baptist Church met Saturday afternoon Dec. 11, in the home of MJsses Lydfe and Lucille Thomas. The living rdom was attractively decorated in the season's theme. . The program "Conquerors Ser vice'.'was.iven 'by Mesdames Floyd Brown, Jasper Williams and Warren Thomas,- The hostesses served a sweet Course with fruit. 1 Rev. and Mrs. S. A. Smith enter tained the Ladies Auxiliary recent ly. Their home was " attractively decorated in the season's colors. After games and contests, each of the guests were presented a gift. ; A delightful salad course empha sising the seasonal colors was ser ved to the 25 guests present. '; " a College tudents home for the Holidays were Russell Lanier, Ken neth and Clifton Quinn, Billy Grea hara,, Yates Dobson, Eugene Wha ley,? Robert Craft, Misses Polly Brown and Rebecca Thomas. . Those spending the holidays t their homes here with their re spective parents and families were Mr. and Mrs. Russell Lanier, Mr. ind Mrs. Clifton Quinn, Mr. Chas. Parker of Raleigh, Mr. Dick Harris of Winston-Salem, Miss Edna Earle Gresham of Greensboro, Miss Myrt le Ray Home and Miss Mary Lynn Horne of Kinston, Mr. 2nd Mrs. Paul Hunter of Warsaw, and John i ny Edwards of Rose Hill. Dr. and Mrs. Paul Bolin visited Today's Paiteni v 9251 SIZES ft ' i to o j9 'i QHLVONtlD.- 35" n.itar 9K1 Rliai 1. 2. 3. 4. , . fir. 9 liimnF. lacket. 1 yds. JS- in. nap; blouse (one-piece) yd. in. WEI this nattern to 170 News- nen Dept. 2M West ? v York 11. N. Y. Print I . NAME. ADDRESS, f . .m. v i cn more brings I AT: IAN MARTIN Fall r Fashion book! Good f i w-ncw des'nsi toys i p i for all "i r '--'fid ' r i ill 1 V I YLE Auxiliary M V V r A Gift mmmmmmmmmi 1 (JlHIIlii! UUIIUIIIIIfXr "IllIIHIMin T-i " 0 Architects drawing of the Self Memorial Hospital which James C. Self. Sr., president of the local textile mill, Is present ing to the city of Greenwood, S.C. The hospital, to cost several million dollars, will provide beds for 179 patients. Mr. Self, a cashier in a Greenwood bank, rot Into the textile business prior lo World War I when he decided he could do more for his com munity than "lend $50 on a blind mule." her parents in S. C. last week. Mr. and Mrs. Charlton Sandlin and Sherry, with Mr. and Mis. J. W. Mallard of Warsaw and Miss Yvon ne Waters and Donald Mallard of Rose Hill were guests of Mrs. J. C. Mallard, Jr. near Fairmont on Christmas day. Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Muldrew and family spent the holidays in Flor ence, S. C. Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Turner 6f Pink Hill were with her parents on Christmas day. Mrs. Ellis Brinson and family were recent dinner guests of Mrs. R. T. Quinn of Kenansvilie. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Campbell and Gene spent several days vith relatives in Ky. during the holidays Mrs. S. W. Gresham retu;-ied home last week t'rom Parrotts Hos pital in Kinston where she had been a patient for several days. Mrj. T. A. Barden of Ross Hill visited relatives here during ll.u holidays. Mr. Walter Gresham and Billy visited Miss Anne Uresnam in Wil liamston last week. Mr. and Mrs. Jim D. Sandlin wen? with relatives in Rose Hill last week. Clarence Whaley Clarence Whaley, age 40, of near Beulaville, died suddenly, Dec. 20, while at work at Camp Lejeune. Funeral services were held from the home of John Thigpen in the Potters Hill community Wednes day afternoon at 3 o'clock by Rev. H. J. Whaley of Beulaville. In addition to his wife, the for mer Bertie Mae Jarman of Rich lands, he is survived by his mother, Mrs. Alice Whaley; two sisters, Mrs. John Thigpen of near Beulaville, and Mrs. F. P. Moore of Richlands. H. A. Brooks Dies Henry Andrew Brooks, age 75, re tired farmer of near Rose Hill died at his home Wednesday night of last week after a lingering illness of about 15 months. Funeral services were held at the home the following Friday after noon at 2:30 by Rev. K. D. Brown of Burgaw. Burial was in the family cemetery near the home. He is survived by his wife: and three daughters, Mrs. Sam Ingram of Burgaw, Mrs. J. F. Parker of Rose Hill, and Miss Mary A. Brooks 4)1 Bayshore, N. Y.; three sons. H. S. Brooks .of Rocky Mount, T; G. Brooks of Burlington, and K.' D." Brooks of Wallace, all by a former marriage; a number of grandchild ren and two great grandchildren; one brother, L. R. Brooks 'of Wal lace. Pfc. J. W. Murphy Funeral services for John .W Murphy, who was killed in an auto mobile accident on July 1, 1945, while on Military duty in Germany. was held at the Bethel Wesleyan Church near Rose Hill at 2:30 on Sunday afternoon by Rev. K. D. Brown, assisted by Rey. A. D. Wood and Williams Repairs & Supplies NEAR PINK HILL to the City 1 -'fafin J; fnniliifiilii; t ' r r r . .. i '?'"' f W Vf f M V " - of Rose Hill, Rev. L. C. Young and Fred Roe of Clinton, S. C. Full Mil itary burial rites were held at the Clay Hill Cemetery near the cjiurch The remains were carried to the home of Leadie Tachey of the Charity community near Rose Hill Saturday afternoon and ' remained there until the hour of the funeral. I He is survived by his parents Mr. ' and Mrs. J. F. Murphy; three bro thers, Carl, Charles, and Gerald Murphy; five sisters, Virginia, Reba, Myrtle, Edna, and Marie. Murphy, all of Clinton, S. C. Watch Queen . Jane Froman, singing star of '"The Pause That Refreshes, on The Air,'.' CBS radio show every Sunday night, has been selected by the nation's leading manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers of jewelry, as the qneen of the Jewelry Industry Council's "1948 WATCH PAR ADE." She was- chosen to symbolise by her grace, beauty and artistic integrity, the ideals -for which the organization stands. Come and Sit Bridal Shower Mrs. R. A. Oates was hostess at a Come and Sit bridal shower on Wednesday evening, Dec. 8 at her home, honoring Miss Vicky Manty, bride elect. Christmas decorations were used and the table was decorated in green and white. The hostess pre sented Miss Manty a corsage of white carnations and the guests gave her a miscellaneous shower of gifts. Games and contests were enjoyed. The hostess and her dau ghter Joyce, served coffee, fruu cake, nuts and mints. MRS. M. M. THIGrEN Beulaville. N. C. Representative For CLINTON FLORAL COMPANY WARSAW, N. . C. We're booking you solid, for a year of good health prosperity. - m..- I.,., in ' ' ' T "." w' ' U- I THE AMERICAN WAY ; ""i I FREEDOM By: Maurice R. Franks RELEASED BY GEORGE PECK (Editor's Note: M. R. Franks is Director of the National Labor-Manage- ment Foundation and Editor of In speaking of free enterprise, too few of us seem to realize its significance, what it stands for, how it came about and what it means to our American way of life. A poll was taken on this sub ject a few yeafs ago to determine the attitude of the man on the street towards free enterprise. The poll disclosed some interesting op inions. Few participants understood the real meaning of this system. Some of the answers were so vague as to be practically blank others were downright ludicrous. When one man was asked what he thought of free enterprise, he re plied with that well-known dumb, astonished look, "They ought to put a tax on it." Another, when questioned, retorted. "If it's free, it can't be any good." By and large, we Americans, who have so greatly benefited by thfs system, have become so accustomed to it that we take it completely for granted and make the simple as sumption that it always was and I always will be with us. ! But free enterprise was not al- ways here and, if certain forces ! have their way, it is slated for an early demise. The Socialists and Communists do not believe in free enterprise as we Americans know it and, whether they be pink or red, are leaving no stone unturned to discredit it and deliver it onto the junk heap in exchange for a system of state control, similar to that in effect in Soviet Russia and her sat ellite nations. This, if nothing else, sliouid re mind us that freedom of enterprise, like our other basic freedoms, does not contain the germ of its own immortality. The blood and sweat which brought it into being cry aloud for eternal vigilance. We Americans proudly boast and rightly, too that we are the greatest nation on earth. But I wonder how many of us have taken time out to discover why we can claim such stature. Well, one of the chief reasons for our national greatness lies in our adherence to the system of free enterprise the system which, through its natural creation of incentive, profit, has promoted the highest initiative yet known to man. Under this particu lar economy, the most of the best for the least is made available, with the result that we Americans are conspicuously well off, as com pared to the citizens of other na tions. Our standard of living, ir respective, of our station in life, is one of almost soyal enjoyment However, in order to preserve this system the system of profit and loss we must likewise pay a price. IOOOO0OOOO6OOO99OOOOOOOOG Worth crowing ahout valued patronage you shown us. May you yours spend a glorious Year. We invite your patronage again during 1949 L. P. Tyndall's Sons IN PINK HILL 000000000000000000000000 The New Year is on its way, and we'd like to take this time to wish you a happy 1949. Your Business in the past is truly appreciated. We'll be loking forward to seeing you in 1949. ' 7An$A7 FURNITURE CO. IN WARSAW IS MOT FREE its official publication, PARTNERS. And that price is industrial and personal integrity the honest will to deliver an honest day's work for an honest day's pay. In a word, our precious freedom of enterprise, if it is to survive the forces that would destroy it, must be fully and consistently paid for through our Conscientious adher ence to the principle of fair deal ing, all around. The motto of free entemrise can never be, "Business is business, and Devil take the suck- er : it must De, Business cau ue ... . . . . i business so long as it has a heart. Paradoxial as it may appear on the surface, and whether we wish to accept the fact or not, we must pay a price for freedom. And tnat price when understood by one and all, means that the freedom of the other fellow is the only basis for our own The price of freedom is conscience; FREEDOM ISN'T FREE. COLORED NEWS- Kenansville's Colored Pastor. Rev Thomas E. Everette, former pastor of A. M. E. Zion Church in Kcnansvme. died December 20, 19 48. He was born April 24, 18.4. At an early age he was converted and joined church in Brunswick County. Later he started pastoring in the A. M. E. Zion Church. For more than forty years, he served in the North Carolina Conferences. Wilmington, Fayetteville and Nsw Bern Districts. Circuits - Tomahok, Rock Fish, Kenansvilie, Smithfield, Wilson Mills, and Mt. Calvary Sta tion Church, at which he was ser ving when called to his reward. He was twice married. The firs; to Miss Duley Judge; to this union five children were borne. All are now dead. After the death of the first Mrs. Everette he remained a widower for several years. The second marriage was to Mrs. Clara O. Walker of Rose Hill, Oc. 8. 1941. They made their home in Warsaw. N. C. Rev. Everette passed away or Monday, Dec. ,20. at 3 p.m. after a short illness, from high b'ood pres sure and heart failure. A week-be-fore he died he called his wife and sister Dora to his bedside and told I them, "I am going to my God, but you two can visit each other, be cause my sou! is on guard." He was conscious to the last. With his passing the family has lost companionship; the church and community a Christian Leader He lived consistantly a religious leader, an example which many the , have ' and New should follow. He leaves to mourn, his wife, three sisters, and a host of nieces and nephews. It is our loss, but we feel that it is Heaven's gain. Sleep on dear loved one, and take your rest, we lovtrt you but God loved you best The Family. Tobacco Meeting Mr. Roy Bennett,," Intension To bacco Specialist, and others concer ned with disease and insect con!vi will be in Duplin County. Wednes day afternoon, January 5, for a meeting with tobacco growers to discuss problems facing them next year. This meeting will be held in the Kenansvilie High School Audi torium, beginning at 2:00 p. m. Once each year, Mr. Bennett and his group of co-workers olfer to come to the county to discuss these major tobacco problems. It is a wonderful opportunity for tobacco growers to receive information and keep posted on the latest findings and developments at the Experi ment Station. , Will you please spread this infor mation to the people of your com munity? I hope that you will come and bring a good group with you. Very truly yours. L. F. Weeks, County Ageni Aged Negro: Frozen To Death Near Rose Hill - Marman Phillips, aged Negro, of Rose Hill Township, was found m a field on the farm of Mr. Nash Johnson, frozen to death on the morning of December 27th. Accord ing to Coroner C. B. Sitterson. there was found in his pocketbook something over $100 and no foul play was indicated. It is underst i.l that he had been drinking on Christinas day anu had evidently lost his way while trying to pe! home. He was found by Mr. Nash Johnson. Bertis Fusssll and a part ! of search ;rs who had been out look- j ing for him since he was missed. ( Fcsa storeQ Home Style - Sandwich Marvel Bread Mild & Mellow 8 O'Clock Coffee Dried Blackeye Peas Standard Pack Tomatoes Ann Page with pork, torn, sauce 16 oz. can Beans 10c Ann Page Creamy Smooth 16 oz. jar Peanut Butter 35c Scott's 51b Meal 25c Red Delicious Apples Fresh Carrots Fresh Green Cabbage Nice Cocoanuts Tempee Oranges Tangerines CLOSE WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Duplin Theatre V2KSV,II.C SUN. - MON. Jan. 2-3 The Mating With Glenn Ford And Evelyn Keyes. 1 TUESDAY, Jan. 4 Lady From Shanghai With Rita Hay worth And Orson Welles. WEDNESDAY, Jan. 5 The Gallant Legion With Bill Elliott. Also Serial THURS. - FRI. Jan. 6-7 Deep Waters With Dana Andrews And Cesar Romero. SATURDAY, Jan. 8 DOUBLE FEATURE Who Killed Doc Robin Son Of God's Country With Monte Hale. WHITEHOUSE Evaporated MILK 3 tall cans 39c - Reg. Pan lVztb loaf 18c 31bbag Sl.-ISe lift pkg. 15c 2 No. 2 cans 29c 21b 31c 2 bunches 17c 101b 30c 21b 19c 31b 25c 3ft 24c
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Dec. 31, 1948, edition 1
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