'THE DUPLIN TIMES r busked Meh rrld.y In KeaaaevUle. N. C Ceaety Sect ar DUPLIN COUNTY ' MIUMal fcualneoa and rtaUag Uat, KcaaaSTjIle, J. ROBERT GRADY. EDITOR OWNER Kntered at the Post Office. KeBaaSYtlle, N. C TIL1PHONI8 Kenansville. 255-6 . ' ; WtwaeWt Z93t SUBSCRIPTION RATES: I3.M per' year 1m Danlla Canty; IS.5I per rear year outside Duplia County, la North Carsliaa: SIM per year outside North Carolina, except to Me la TJ. ft. Armed Force, Anywhere, fS.II per year. - Advertising rates fnrniahed en request. A Democratic Journal, devoted to the material, educational, eeoaomlo and agricultural lntereata of Duplin Count. Dank Carolina vA Noiional AdvaiiUlug S.apraialt!e 'American Phh Ajjicw,,m Naw Teri CMaee NOTICE OF SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF AUTHORITY contained in that certain section of the Consolidated Statutes of North Carolina, Section 115-86, entitled "Sale of School Property" of the General Statutes of North Carolina, the undersigned will offer for sale for cash, 6n Mon day, March 21, 1949, at the hour of 12:00 Noon, at the Courthouse Door in Kenansville, North Carolina, all that certain tract or parcel of land situated in Duplin County, State of North Carolina, and being describ ed as follows: BEGINNING at a stake on the south edge of the cart road that "leads from Curtis Halls to O. R. Quinns on Susan Ann Jones heirs line, and runs with said line South 38 West liHfc poles to a stake near the fence; thence North 2 East 16 poles to a stake on the cart road; thence with said road South 85 East 8 3-5 poles to the beginning, con taining 1 acre, more or less, md D. H. f INSURANCE WARSAW, Life - Fire - Storm - Automobile, etc. Warsaw, MX - Telephone :?!), QUINN 'WHOLESALE CO OF WARSAW IN DUPLIN Distributors Of POLAR BEAR FLOUR GROCERIES, FEEDS, SEEDS MILFORD QUINN. Mr. k Warsaw Fish Market CREATORS AND MAINTAIN ERS OK LOWEK , - PRICES ON QUALITY SEA FOODS ' . ' (Next Door to A&P) . Both Wholesale and Retail ' ' , . . , . . . - ' Know Your Fish or Know Your Fishmaii ' WILLIS BARTLKTT 5 , . FREE . Phone 239-1 r ':-WB dressing warsaw! .v. c. . deliver. A944eooe4e44HSaeM"NS4HS ifirsSymp:lheticMcir,cri:ls "v-:: YouVanlHaly see :'n;7:'-Kv: 7: (Bill) VILLIAMi0:i f ;.. In KcnensviHo n. r being the same lands, as described in a deed to the Board of Education from Curtis Hall as recorded in Book 164, page 78, of the Duplin County Registry. A ten per cent deposit will be required of the successful bidder on date of sale, as evidence, of geed faith. Advertised this the lit day of February, 1949. R. M. Carr, Chairman, Board of Eaucatlen ef Duplin Coonty. O. P. Johnson, Secretary 3-18-4t. OPJ ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having this day qualined as Ad ministrator of the estate of Willie (Bee) Jones Outlaw Grady estate, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate to present their claims within one of last publication of this notice, or this notice will be plead in bar ofj their recovery. All person), indebted to said estate will please make Inline- Monuments. Of Design quality worp..xanship truk "tonus . finely cut see 1 FRANCIS OAKLEY The Qulaa-HoGewea Co. IN WARSAW '"HON ACiENCY NORTH I WROI l : ,5 nam,. I" i' " t !1 i' lnl.rn.tion.1 Uattn . k LJ iiLL 1 -Sun, Sr-hall t..- m r : SCRIPTURXl Mark JC-Mt Lake rftEVOTlONAl. RliUHNO: "Matthew 10:5-16. i . .- " Leadership Sc! ool Lesson for March 10. Itt8 1 IT TAKES more than a ct.ll of God to be a Christian leader. It takes study, it takes work. The call is : necessary, of course, but it is not all. Jesus set the i church an example here as always. He called his Twelve; but he was not so foolish as to think that lust because he had called them they were all- ready to go out and, tak4 the lead. Jesus but them through' wat pr Foreman may be.tqrtled'vfiei . - -V ; first Leadership: Training SehooJ in the history of the! Christian church. Who Was Enrolled? THE TWELVE Apostles were the training class. Not all Jesus' disciples were equal to It; perhaps some of them actually -did not have the time. But these Twelve bad al ready been set off from the others, not because they were better men, but in order to do more direct ser vice in Christ's name. There was nothing formal about Jesui' training school. It met wherever he was at the time in a noose, e by the roadside, or en a hin-tep. There , were no act hows, ao textbooks, credlU or diplomas. Jesus kept it going to the very end, for even after the Resurrection, as Luke tells us (in Acts 1) be was still teaching his Twelve. I a a What Did They Study? THERE WAS no printed circular, no bulletin, no prospectus or catalogue., All the "courses" amounted to Just one thing: learn ing to do what Jesus was doing.-To this day, that is the aim of . all Christian training. Mark and Luke mention at least four things Jesus' training-school students learned from him: preaching, healing the sick, feeding the hungry, arid pray ing. It would not be quite true to say that part of what they learned was spiritual and part practical, or there is nothing more practical than praying as Jesus taught it, and Jesus never ministered to people's physical needs without touching their spirits too. Many a person new In seme hospital for the Insane need act have gone there If he had had & help that's wen-tralne mln r eaa give; . ,; '' Ministers today are not taught hoW to perform miracles like the feeding of the 5,000;" but knowing that people's physical well-being has a great deal to do with their spir itual welfare, the alert young Chris tian minister of today will bo keen ly interested in Chirlstian social ac tion. .k. , , .How Did They Learn? THE TWELVE learned by doing. It is the onlv wav von learn any thing of a practical nature. Memo-' rizing a, textbook, - . memorizing rules, , is not 1 e a r n i n g. .. You ' have learned how to do a thing only 7 when you can do it. Of course you have to see it done, first, A boy on ! the farm learns to be a furn.er by ; watching his father and helping him, ' more, than from school courses in 1 agriculture, useful as they are. There is. nothing to take the place of apprenticeship under , one who knows. So Jesus' Twelve watched him, listened to him, helped him, before they were trusted on their, Own. - ; '-'r - Will It Still Work? ; i rS METHODS Jesus taught are Just as- effective today as they ever were. Not all churches nowa - days-follow his line to the letter;. In 1 V. : fact, most churches do not.- But the basic principles which Jesus drilled into his first traveling-representatives ar still food. One isfalta, ' 'MIsetenarles la um SMh ea s tary are roqetred to tmkaa treat . deal , mora eqalpment srlth them ' V to their field than one pair of :i aheeev ea eaae and aa tnaty '. parse. Vet whe can deny that . :aay missionary. of any .cbnreh); la China er in Korea teeay, mast ' ttye by faith .from day. to day? Another or Jesus' principles was direct aentaet. People are not won to Christ chiefly by sermons from pulpits, but by ln-the-home contact. Ministers know this, missionaries know ..it- .Sunday- school teachers ought to know It too. Getting ac quainted" with your boys and girls at their home, and being a friend to them there. Is what will give your Sunday teaching its greatest force and success. . " .... -, (-: (Copyrlxht by thi International Coua- hf at 40 I'rnfaiMnt danomlnaUon. cu pi rff vioui E.micauon on bi Halaaaad vw nnu aaaruraa. diate settlement The limlersfencd, 1 ' ! g quali fied as tiie Lxecutnx of the Last Will ami Test&meut of M. V.T. Daugherty, late of Duplin Coun ty, and. having qualified before the Clpk of Superior Court of Duplin County, this is to notify all per sons who have claims against said estate to present their claim to the undersigned Executrix, on or be fore the. 2nd flay of March, 1950, or this notice will be plead' In bar to their recovery,, All persons who are indebted tn sald estate will please nuke immediate payment to the undersigned Executrix, i ; : This the 2nd day of March, 194U. ELLEN. WHALEY DAUGKERTY, - , Executrix of the Last Will . - and Testament of M. K. T. ' .. r ; Dangherty, deceased, Magno- ,1 11a, Jf. C, Route 2. -H. IE. Phillips, Attorney - C Kenansville. N. CU&- ; ':'"44fcSi - . notice.: The County Board of Equaliza tion and Review will meet at the Courthouse in Kenansville, N. C on Monday, March 21, 1949, at 2:30 o'clock to equalize the valuation of all property in the County to the end. that such property, shall be listed on the tax records at the val uation required by law. . A. C. HALL, Chairman, ... Board of. County Com missioners.;. 3-18-2t ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE ; Having this day qualified as Ad ministrator of the estate of A. J. Boyette, deceased, late of Duplin County, North Carolina, this k -to notify all persons having olaima against said estate to present them to the,' undersigned, on - or before one year from last publica tion of this notice or this notice will be plead In bar of their re covery. All . persons indebted to said estate will please make Im mediate settlement " This, the 14th day of February, 1949. C. W. Boyette, Admini. strator of A. J. Boy ette 'estate. Grady. Mercer, Atty. 3-23-dt QM. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION : The undersigned having qualified as admlnistrtor of the estate -ef Mrs. Clara B. (Mrs. C. W.) Csvei augh, deceased, before, the Clerk of .the, Superior Court of Duplin County, on the 26th day of Janu ary, 1949, this is to notify all pe -sons who have claims against said estate to present their- claims tj the undersigned .Administrator on For Best Prices and Com plete Job on Monuments, or Write Rev, H. J. Wholey REITI.AVTLLE as In ii'- tmuraece 5e.,,;rtnJividuals in eastern - ,on.n uu '.Mk F. ALLEN JR. .VCencral ln:urariee; 1 KpN7 ANSVILLE.N, C. WAN5V,n l-E'S ONLV INaJRANCBAtHSJCV- I. M. JESTES73L Xlkr . N. C CONSOLIDATUD "Fserf sf.Wiyc: ' n : Former Wc Vi I - r.oLDSBor.o, . pr:or:c nzi ci r J . y Lcsk Vho is Bc! Hof ; y : or before the 23rd day of tehrn ary, 1930, or thU notice wiU be pleaded in bar of their recovery. . All persons indebted to the e& tate will please make Immediate settlement With the undersigned . This the 23rd day of February, 1949. r . W. L. Cavenaugb, Admini i strator. of Mrs. Clara E, (Mrs. C. , W. Cavenanfh. 4-1-Bt WLC pr.;WCc!v;c!l OPTOMBTRIST Eyes ExaaUned, Glasaea aTUieaV N-xt Dear Te Caveaoaaii Ckrrrolet Cesaaaay '' Permaaeat Offloa ta WALLACE. W. C MRS. M. M. TlLlGPEN Benlavtlle, N. C, :: Beaeeeeatattva Wmrr:- CONFLOBALX WARSAW. M. C OOOOOOOOOOO0 WHEN YOK NEED SERVICES OF A AUCTldj'EER J.p ; 1 BILL lli::ES; JR. Phone 270-1 2siay; 'p. WARSAW, N.' t OOOOOOOOOOOO -if i-n -T1 r-r 237-1 275-1 IM. C, vt i i? 3 cow : u. c. ccixrr: WARSAW At AM LODGE m AT 1:S. ALL IIASTEH HASuna , A&B INV1TKD TO1 ATTNKD. MEETS EVERT SECOND-1 AND FOURTH TDBSDAT "NIGHTS A. J. CAVENAUGU JSWKUUI " PIAMOSRtS WA1aU WATCH AND JEWELRY (. tSTAISIStt aWeKAVBli ' . WsIIrc V. C Southerland Electric Co Warsaw, N.C Phone 361-1 ' Tout G. EJi Dealer ' SALEP (b SERVICE AH Types Of Wiring Wow Plymouth on Dipjay i r - Plymouth s new special deluxe is .featured above. ; Brilliant new styling k combined with outstanding rating comfort, increased roominess, ancl sweeping mechanical improve ments in the new line of Plymouth automobuea. Completely redesigned; the new nymouth baa a longer wheelbaae for a better ride and more road stability, but- less front and overhang for easier parking and garaging. While the silhouette has .been lowered and the width- de- orcased, there is more head and leg room ana seats are wider. Typical of Plymouth many refinements is the Ignition-starter combination, -wttn wmcn a turn of the key starts tne engine, , , The new Plymouths are sleek In appearance. New reaf-end atyling provides a arsceniT balance , with the horttontal grille lines which em phaslse the broadness of the ironL r enders which blend perfectly , into body lines are nevertheless separate aad detachable, time avoiding sheet tJ paaeh) se costly to repair or Mrteee. . .J 'I t The: new Plymouth line includes nine distinct automobiles. Special deluxe and deluxe types are on a 118-inch wheelbfse, one, Inch .iorr mnoAiL v .. . BariAasatty f- Dtent . . i Swtca, av or BiXaf e(. Ws-MH99ita. REMEMBER TODAfj . I WITH A - ' PHOTOGRAPH 1 STUDIO r Df MOUNT OLIVE A ; Paaaea Sll-l ar Nfl . " COMMERCIAL . i I PHOTOGRAPHY A SPECIALTY 1 than ' last. year's. Special . deliuu t t models are: four-door sedan, clul.- V coups, convertible; dub coupe and : station wagon. ,lnj' the dfluxe group , T are the ' four-door sedan and the club coupe.. In addition, Plymouth ' . will build three deluxe models ' e brand new jilrinch. wheelbese, e ' two-door sedan.' thrpassenger coupe, and new ibody -type, the ; ; The 87-horsepower engine has un-, v ; proved performance and efficiency with", new.'aesigiijeyl ' W bead which Increases,' conj t.on ratio . : to 7 .to. L A' new chrome plated compression piston, ring reduces cylinder wear and provides greater protection during ihe break-in v period. There are imoroved nil rings for greater oil economy, while , t newly-designed Intake jnanuId . induces quicker, smoother an-' Warm-up and produces faster thro .li response. ft1 Y!,? y- - Body styling which produces greater passenger room-without es. ' - cessive bulk also increases V-type windshields have I - 1 . more ; area , and prc.iJj ,( vision without distortion. T ' 1 wipes' dear 61.5. perte.it. gre t area and the rear window is i t per nt larger. ."".. s. This the 31 day of January.