THE DUPL.IN TIMES Published each Friday in Kenansville,, N. &,Xomity.8 t -of , . , ' : , DUPLIN COUNTY ' ' ' -' Editorial business and printing plant, KenansvUl,.N;Cr iw" : J. E03EBT GHADY.'EDITOJt OWNER J ,t5 Entered at the Post Office, Kenansville, N. C. ' ' '- as second class matter. ' "'j ,. V T E I.E PHONES ' V '.kenansville, 255-6 , Warsaw. M-2' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $3.00 per year in Duplin County; 3.50 per1 year outside Duplin County, in North Carolina; $4.00 per year outside the State of North Carolina. ' Advertising rates furnished on request DenWraUc Journal, 'devoted to the material, educational, : "ononand agrieultural lntereste of Duplin County. Jurors listed Of County Court iThfl following list of jurors hav been drawn for June County court. H.V-K. Cottle,, Wm. L. Miller. James Bachelor, J, H. Whitfield, Ambrose James, T... B. Cavenaugh, CJcero Bowdon, Joe E. Wood, David J-Brock.'iVeston Basden. Wm. Elmo 1 r- ccn nfi a iou4 WIN PCINCHM 1 Cf FLYIN9,TH WA5 Trit FIRST ATTtMCT M LEGS PGOP6U.EJ2-WI5E. CtAXlO TUE FLAPHAPPV BIRP(TMIS SAME MODEL HA5 BEEN MADE IMIOA Cf MOW AVAILABLE ID TH0USANP OF CHILDCEM THB0USH A BffiAKFAST CEPEAU MANUWCTUKR "; f,;-! 'I mm f UONARPOMVINCI :ii i J K , . . ooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo o- ' , ; .; 2- r q Of' . J O v S o V o 2 o 2 2 r) i ' Consult us today aboulhw you can build your k , child's financial ut"re and thus assure him of possible advantage, llui when the day comes and it's your son reading the . graduation address. Think towards that day now and start planning for it today. ' FIRST CITIZEIIS BAIIK & TRUST COMPAIIY i Pin!ilii.!f jsCa Maready.L. T. Knowies, J; B. Fus- ki.1I. E. N. Baker. R. D. Harper. Mrs Alma Herring, Elmore Brinson, B, S. Whitman, J. C. Harrell, James A Sayag. L. H. Quinn, D. J. Simmons V. Ralph Hanchey, I. . Sullivan and Charlie E. Blanton. SELLARS RE-ELECTED B. C. Sellars was re-elected mayor of Calypso for the 11th term since 1017 in recent municipal el ections. He defeated his opponent J. G. Dickson 111 to 82 votes. Five commissioners elected were Tnhn Alhritton. Herman Barwltk, Needhanr. Sloan, Paul Grice and Jesse Swinson. ma PUiNCiPLt u: v. :: j n. ; V0UN6TeR CAN HAVE H0UB5 Of FUN WITH THIS NOVEL PREMIUM, INCB-F0R ALL $UM AND A 6I?APB-Nirr BOJtTOP-THEV. CAN 6iTA FLAPHAPPV BIRO Some Day ThisVill Be Your Son . . . . if vnu cfnrt en vine for his college educa4on now. 203 Million Roed Bond Issue - J- ' Mr. Li. h. Woodcock, white, 34 years oX 3 feet 0 inches tall; we.fch't 140 pounds; gray hair and mULlacho - Missing from his homo in Magnolia since April 12th. When Jast scon was wearins h1ui mvr. i lis and overall jumper, light gray hat and work shoes. Mr. Woodcock is suffering from amnesia. Any one knnjr!nf thn luhapaahniif o r9 4V.:. 'Tinn please contact Sheriff Ralph J. jolcs, Kenansville, N. C. A total of 1,230 persons lost the r driver's licenses in April as a re sult' of traffic violations, the Da pai iment oi m Motor Vehicles an nounced today. A. R. C. Home Nursing Courses End Calypso School: The Sopho mores and Juniors of Calypso High School have completed a six weeks course in Red Cross Home Nur sing. The course was taught by Miss Augusta Futchs, R.N., gradu ate of the James Walker Memorial Hospital, Wilmington. She is novv employed by the Wilmington Chap ter of the American Red Cress. The course was made available by the Duplin Chapter A. R. C. and Mr. O. P. Johnson, Superintendent of Duplin County Schools. Some of the topics taught and demonstrated were: Caring for the sick In the home; preventing the spread of disease, carry ing out the coctor'8 orders; and conserving i nurse's energy. As a result of this course, eight of the girls indicated ; a desire to choose nursing as their profession. T1a illnurnf oii1c Iiqua pnmnlp. I ted the Home Nursing-Course suc cessfully and will receive certifi cates as a recognition of passing the 'American Red Cross Home Nursing Course; Thelma Batson, Dorothy Brock, Edna Eatmon, Hilda Ezzell, Sara Korne.ay, Kathleen Kelly, Joyce Malpass, Joyce Mrrtin, Norma Jean O jtlaw' M.ittle Price, Peggy Roberts, Janet Swinson, Emma Smith, Janice Summerlin, and Dorothy Turrer. Warsaw nishjSchool: We girl,? in the third year Home Economics Class at the Warsaw High School are learning many new ways .j make sick folk more comfortaole in our homes. We have had the O ."O o o o o . o ?;o o o r o o o , o o o BEFORE THE BOARD ' OF COMMISSIONERS ;..iMay 2, MM North Carolina,. ' Duplin County. I WHEREAS, The Board of Coun ty Commissioners of Duplin County have givn much thought and con sideration to our public road and public school situation in Duplin County, and ire intensely interest ed in our road and school improve ment program; and, . WHEREAS, The recent General Assembly - provided for .1 special election on a, $200,000,000.00 Bond Issue for Roads, and $25,000,000.00 for public school buildings; and, WHEREAS, The Board of County Commissioners o Duplin County feeis that the future progress of the County ia somewhat ttd up with uia road and school improvement profi.'i.ivi; now, THiiKiir ORE, Be it resolved by the Board of Counly Conisniioiterk of Duplin County that hereby heartily recommend the passage off the $2o0.l01,0C0.G0 of RoaJ Bonds, and $25,000,000.0'' S-Iioul Ballding Bonds, and urge full support of the Road Bonds and Public School Building Bonds. This the 2nd, day of May, 1949. Board of County Commissioners, A. C. Hall, Chairman G. D. Bennett L. P. Wells Arthur Kennedy Dallas Jones ATTEST: A. T. Outlaw, Clerk good fortune to be one nf ihe ih -on ichools in Duplin this year to hnve the service of a Trained Rd Cr ss Nurse to teach a secondary home' nursing course in our schrol An adult class was also organized anci taught. We have learned that this train ing helps to keep our families mere healthy; that love is not enough, for wc need knowledge too. W i happy to know that we will be able to give safe, simple and effective nursing care to those who -are sick. ThDse of us who have met the re quirements of this course will re ceive certificates. A Student. P.S. Members of our class were: Margaret Anderson, Evelyn Black burn, Emily Mary Frederick. Mary Lee Jones, Macy Lanier, Jean Mil icr, Mary Mcore, Martha Anne Smith, Rene Smfh, Aiidr Taylor, Ann West. Betty West, Mary Ellis West, Phyllis Whitfield, and Iris Marie Williams. The nine ladies making up th3 adult class were:,Mesdames Bennle Carr, T. M. Carr, Eluin Carter. E B. Hales, Gilbert Holmes, B D. .lcyd, W. H. Moore, Sylvia Pecora, and Robert Smith. Several of the ladies wrote words of praise about the class. I have really learned a lot from this homo nursing course. There were a lot of things that I did not know. I really learned how to take care of a sick person without so much trouble and to do so without making the paiient feel they v;re a burden. , - I have thoroughly enjoyed this course, t not only feel that I have icarn- d something worth while, but I have enjoyed working with the ladies. It has been fun. I learned v'-at to do and how to da it the r :er and easier vay. It wiTl help i..e a grert deal should a member oi mf family become ill. 1 think it would be grand if every molher could take this course. Tiiis is a most practical couise. Every mother and father should have it. It can't be given as part of a IIij!i School Course too soon. Every boy and girl should be able to care f-.r the sick when the nec essity arrives. Miss Augusta Futchs is most ca pable and understanding. She has 'ne p&?:ence to get the course across tn the timid and backward Faison Colored School We, the pupils of Duplin Training School, '. ujiui:, wisn tt, extend to Mrs.- N. B. Boney, Executive Secretary, A. R. C, Duplin County Chapter, and jnr. t-i. -r. jonnson, Superintendent of Duplih Couaty Schools, our sin cere thanks and appreciation for nuKing ii possiDie lor us to take th Red Cross Home Nurtslng Course undef the Instruction of Miss Augusta Futchs, R.N. Under Miss Futchs' patient, kind and efficient ; leadership we have learned how to properly care 'or the sick at home in a practical wd economical way, ' by using home made items such as paper bags, btd room shoes,, pads and protective covers from Jiewsoaoera. bed rout bedside tables and many other uw- mi wings iiiauc irom pasteooaro boxes. . - .i''.1, We will alwavs rnnomW thi't soap, wateu and friction are the 3 reliable cleansins aeenta. whan properly used. : ; . ;. - ,--"'-...-..' The course means a great deal to us and we are verv srateriil for having had the privilege of this Some of us iave been inspired to the extent that we plan to enter this great field of humf n eTVlce. f r"-y we hone t" ' t r" i to t to benefit from ..this.-very fin course. 4,.V. X'fi''-':i''-:'urr, Girls waiting oil certificates are: LiUi Mae Avery, Nancy L. Butler, Lucille Boyette, Clonnle Ma But ler, Hazel Craddock,' Mylie Pearl Cobb. Alice Ruth Cobb. Velma bar- ' topiUilO WT School i.-. t 4 lpttoi..r.::.ZiJ SCRIPTURE: Mark Wi M:. r DEVOTIONAL HEADING: I ThM lonlans 8:1-11. Judgment Da LeHao for Hay 15, 1949 FORTY OIVFERENT Christian denomir.:n;iMi8 sponsor this col umn, aHhuugh It goes without say ing thai not all of the millions of Christians in those d e n o m.tnMlnna Sfe would agret- imlnl for point with everything tint tg said here Now if the reudei could interview one . tend-T' ing Bible i -pertc from each nf then?; 1 40 deiHmiliiHU'i.n,- and ask each one Dr. Foreman the' same quesiion: "In your personal opinion, exactly what is the meaning of Mark 13?" you might not get 40 different an swers, but you certainly would get more than One There Is bo chapter Id the Bible thai h been the anbject f more arguments than this one, and no arguments have ever keen more ntelen than Ibes. Leaving extreme views aside, let us try to discover some meanings which all 40 denominations would find In this chapter, some truths on which all reasonable Christians can agree. A Certain Fact IN JESUS' view one thing Is cer tain: Qod's judgment on this world and on all persons fn K. Christian churches have different Ideas about what happens after death. We have different ideas about how the judgment is to be carried out, or where it will be held, or when. But that every man will have to give . .scount of him self befor) God Is something Christ ians believe. Your tnw unbeliever la not the persoa who goes art) and saying there la no God. A. more subtle and dangerana form of . unbelief la In the person who , takes the Christian ereed apon his lips bnt Uvea aa if the creed were a lie. He repeats the Apostles' Creed: "From thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead." If those words are sincerely spoken, the believer will honestly try to please God above all others. But the unbeliever, whatever his words may say, shows that he does not believe by the fact that he tries to please, first of all, either him self or his family or his neighbors, and not God above all. An Uncertain Time IT IS ONLY children who think that if something doesn't hap pen Now, it will never happen. Now and Nver are not the only times on God's slock. When will the judg ment be? The disciples Wanted to know, but Jesus did not tell them. He did not claim to know, himself, when it would be (Mark 13:32.) What he did say was, Watch! There is a sense 1m which God's judge ments are going on all the time. The end of your world will cornel In your owa lifetime, whoever you I nr.- fnr thprp is not much differ- ence whether the world folds up and leaves you or whether you fold up and leave the world. Death Is the end of the woild for every one who dies. Fur ther, whenever a person suf fer! by and because of his own wrenc-doing, here In this life and oa this earth,' God la judg- -Ing him by the eternal moral law which Are the very warp and filling of the fabrle of life. There ia also a aense In which God judges societies ' and nations. We nave recently seen how ter rible a judgment Germany drew dowa on its head. The nation that takes the sword . shall perish by (be sword. The nation that sets Out to enslave others by force will come uader the . same death-sen-tenet that cut down .Assyria ' and Rome and Japan and Germany. But net all God's judgments are on this earth. "God doea . not settle all his accounts In October." There Is a final accounting, and no man, in this life or any other, can escape that solemn meeting with God. .. .. The Only JuAf TWO THINGS are sura. One is . that (he only true Judge of any man ia God. The man himself ia partial, ail friends are partial, his enemies are prejudiced against bin. further,, bo one knows all the fact but God. . Only- God knows what a man's motive are; only God tan trace to'thti, final end all tb consequences that flow from a man's act . 1 r irnrwri-M h fMtenuttonal Coim l i 1 " ii on b of ...... .-no. l.lta don, .Annie Ruth Faison, Jeruma Hargrwe. Betty Hargrove, Cather ine; Mathis, Velma: Grace Faison, Lucille Hargrove, Norris Stevens, Pearlie Lee Wright, Mary P. Wright and Sallie Faison. B.F.G.OnTheAir Folks from the B. F. Grady com munlty on a radio broadcast at the Wallace studio Sunday afternoon were Mr. J. D. Grady who spoke on Chocolate". Principal H. M. Wells whose 'topic was "Education in the community", Mrs. Harold Korne- gay discussed the churches, Mrs. Lehman Williams talked about Maxwell's Mill and the American Legion Hut. and Miss Bessie Kor negay spoke on the PTA. Mrs. Florrie Byrd's Music Class gave wo numbers. In all, it was one of the bet programs yet to be given on "The Duplin Hour". HAVE VOir BOUGHT YOUR 1 1CKETS XM nnfl ta i ce 1 JV -J-r XaT M L. II I "Iron Curtain" Dogs ay iuiti PHIS is the fourth apd final report l on dogs in Europe by Elizabeth agg, noted foreign correspondent Dogs play an important role In rmlng the so-called "Iron Cur tin" In Europe today. They are ea extensively along the tense ontlers of the Eastern countries i border patrol. Refugees from the Iron Curtain" states who slip out an me oiacK , as crossing borders legally Is called, say dog patrols re harder to elude than unaided iot police patrols or watchtower mtinels. Dogs detect the presence .' a hidden person where a man III not. The purpose of the "Iron Cur in" Is perhaps as much to keep tizens in the communist coun les, as to keep visitors out. As ich of the Eastern European coun les became communist states, an imediate measure has been the creasing of frontier restrictions id patrol. As the new government owe stronger, frontier policing is iensilled and It becomes harder id harder for Uissatislled persons i get away. Yet, despite risks and dangers, legal border crossings from ih- Perfect Strike Chum SALMON Peas 1I0NA Kippered HERRING A&P's Own Vegetable DEXO. FLOUR All Brands GUM tlichand Flavorful NECTAR TEA Ann Pago Strawberry lea aK SBB1 A BJS trh. aaa a rRtitRVES r Ann Page ,vlth Dork p- tomato sauce i0 ozu can 'I i DtAfiJ Ann Page Gelatin Desserts SPARKLE f.Iarvel SANDWICH BREAD MM & Mellow I O'CLOCK coffee Fresh ASPARAGUS Jresh RADISHES Jfellow !' ONIONS Fresh " CARROTS FIliDAV, MAY 12-i.j-i:i3 County Dc:rd RESOLUTION North Carolina, Duplin County. That the Board of Commissioners of Duplin County were unanimously in favor of calling or recommending to the County Board of Elections of Duplin County that a Referendum be called under the provisions of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act upon the legal advices and the ap proval of the Attorney General it North Carolina. This the 2nd, day of Mav, 1949. Board of County Commissioners. A. C. Hall, Chairman G. D. Bennett L. P. Wrlls Arthur Kennedy Dallas Jones ATTEST: A. T. Outlaw, Clerk. rAtuxi East continue. Refugees usually travel by foot at night, aeeklng wooded areas where possible, though woods have been cut on many boundary lines In order to make patrolling easier. Darting from tree to tree, or hiding behind rocks, dronnlnff. Infn iiith.. mr. culverts and crawling from time to time, they get out by eluding the patrols, with Just the clothes on their backs and whatever small luggagexthey can carry. But natrola that An spell doom to the escapee. The dogs are usually kept leashed, but thej scent out the hiding man. woman, or, sometimes, groups of persons, betray their presence to the guards, and the escaoe is flniahsil Actually thmiirh ,1a.. i.. v. come an objectionable Ingredient m compounding tne "Iron Curtain", they have long been standard eeuln. ment in border patrol work all ever i-.urope. Their use In various kinds r police and guard work la far more extensive than In the Ualted Hi.Ues. The trained nnllea mA uurd dog was traditional In Eu rope years oerore the teim "Iron Cuiuiu" was coined. Ann Page . -mesas' oases asm esssa BSSBSBBI BSSBSBB BBSSBSBr -" i ,- i SALAD DRESSING 1 ql. 45c No. 1 can 47c No. 2 can 10c 2 8 oz. cans . 29c shortening 3 lb can " Wi 79 3 packs 10c Vi lb pkg. lib jar jm IflC 3jkgs. ! 1 ft to leaf k 1 lh bag 4 40 bunch 2 bunches ;; 09c 13c 2 bunches , ., 15: i i

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