Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / May 27, 1949, edition 1 / Page 4
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XIL DUI LIN TIIIUG Comi&y . .11 "liiiee J-Mw&chom -k -c , i j: . v sells 0 !f If. -,ff. it I FQeen Duplin Counly Students r ' Enrolled At Wake Forest College ' Wake Forest, Flf'.een Duplin County students are currently en rolled at Wake Forest College, which this year has had a record' breaking enrollment 0X2111. Six of the fifteen are from Wal lace. They are Ann James, DeLeon T. Murphy, and Donald Bland, sen iors, Fanester James and Decatur Blanchard, juniors, and Gordon Teachey, freshman. -BlanQ is a member of the honor ary i pre-medical fraternity and Zeta Chi social fraternity. Three students from Warsaw arc Henrj. M. Wst, junior Edward REMEMBER TODAY TOMORROW WITH A PHOTOGRABH ! BY KRAFT'S STUDIO IN MOUNT OLIVE Phone 2 17-J or 23 COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY A SPECIALTY Boyette, freshman, and Rebecca Best, senior. West is a member of the Glee Club, Boyette of the hon orary pre-medical fraternity, and Miss Best is an officer in the Bap tist Training Union, and Is a mem ber of the Sunday School. Rose Hill Is represented by Ella Mae Starling and Carl James of the freshman class. Miss Starling is a member of the Sunday School. , Bruce Wilson, a iunior frjm Magnolia, is an officer in the Bap tist Training union, ani a member of the Sunday Scaool. Russell La nier, .1 senior from Beulavllle, is a member of the Sunday School. Dee? Gap is represented at Wake Forest by John Ijndall, freshman, Teachey, by James P. Blanton, senior. Three years ago the Smith Rey nolds Foundation Fund, valued at around $11,000,000, was added to the resources of the College. This fund was donaled on the condit'on that the College be moved to Winston-Salem and that sufficient funds be raised by 1952 to begin construction of the new college. At the same time a gift from Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Babcock of betwscn 400 and 500 acres of the beautiful Reynolds estate was made available to the Wake Forest Col lege as a building site. Construction for minimum needs will provide living quarters for ap proximately 2,000 students and houses and apartments for faculty members and staffs. Steady progress is being mad in securing necessary funds' for the building program. More than $2, 000,000 in cash is already, available. mmms WARSAW,. ' Rimfire n ic Key With James Iillican With Lois Butler, And Bill Goodwin. tuuus. fri. June z-i sssemonnBeassstsassnnessteosnmosnsnisse (TECHNICOLOR) MONDAY. May 30 CrissCross w,hJhE'PaS0 With John Payne, With Burt Lancaster, RusseU And Yvonne de Carlo. f?5SJJT", " SATURDAY June 4 TUEjSBAY, May 31 DOUBLE FEATURE ilo Minor Vices Trouble Makers With Dana Andrews. " ' - Hidden Danger Michael O'Halloran With Johnny Mack Brown. Two Join Navy Garland James Home and Se bastian Ward Rouse recently en listed in the U. S. Navy. They are now undergoing recruit training at San Diego, Calif. Upon completion of recruit training Garland will at tend Airman School in Memphis, Tenn.. Ward will be assigned to Class "A" Service during his train ing at San Diego, Chief W. R. Smith, local Navy Recruiter said. Chief Smith states that he will be at the Fostoffice in Kenan 'ville nvery Thursday during the next several weeks and all interested applicants can contact him there. There are openings for high school graduates for different types of schools. Miss Grace Carter Dies At Duke Miss Grace Hussoy Carter, 21. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Almond Carter of Wallace, .lied at 6 p.m. Thursday of last week in Duke Hospital. She is survived by her parents; two sisters, Mrs. Robert Fields of South Boston, Va, and Lula Carter, of the home; and a brother. Almond Carter, Jr., also of the home. Funeral services were conducted from the Wallace Bap tist church the following Saturday af'ernoon at 2:30 o'clock by Itev. W. W. Hasty. Interment was in. Rockfish Cemetery. Miss Carter was a member of the senior class at Converse College in .Spartan burg, S. C. She was to have gradu ated in June. Now is a good time to buy broil ers, since supplies are abundant and prices are low. Todas Pattern Pattern 9078: sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40. 42, 44. Size 16 sundress, jacket, 414 yds. 35-ln. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 in coins tor this pattern to 170 News paper Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St.. New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STVLE NUMBER. Now! A NEW Marian Martin Fashion Book is ready! On its pages are the most beautiful sum mer styles, designed to sew easily, to make your fashion dollars go further than ever! Plus a FREE pattern, printed in the book, a child's beach robe made of towels. !3end fifteen cents m for this MarkefSummary Snap beans,, squa, 'cabbage, po tatoes and strawberries were the principal , fruits and vegetables moving from North ' marketing points during the week. Potato digging got underway in the Beau fort, Mt. Olive, and. Aurora sections with the demand. good for washed U.S. No. white potatoes.', while unwashed Cobblers ranged from 4.35 to 4. no and washed cobblers at around 5.25. J' : Quarts of N. C. strawberries brought mostly 30 to 45 cents on the New York market at the end of the week and dewberries at mostly at 25 cents. A few pints of blue berries wholesaled at 80" cents on the New York market. " -"'' Bushels of yellow straightneck squash brought 2.75 to 3.50 and Italian type squash, 2.00 to 3,00. 134 bushels of domestic round type caibbage ranged from 2.00 to 2.50 on the New York market at the end of the week. V Trading in snap beans on the Tabor City and Burgaw markets was moderately heavy with weaker prices, and -closed dull in New York at 2.50 to 3.25. , , Offering qf fryers and broilers continued heavy and producers re ceived 24 to 25 cents f.o.b. the farm at Central N. C. points. Eggs were steady to two cents under the previous week. bnort receipts of hogs cause?, a sharp price advance while cattle wore steady. The grain markets were unset tled during the week. Corn and oats showed very few price changes while cash wheat prices were from 5 to 7 cents per bushel weaker at most markets. Uncle Sam Says i r itli An average yield , of 250 bushels per acre la estimated for the 1949 spring beet crop in North Carolina. ATLETES FOOT ITCH NOT HARD TO KILL. J IN ONE HOUR. If not pleased, your 40c back at anv drug store. : T-4-L, a STRONG fungicide, contains 00 alcohol) IT PENETRATES. 1 Reaches " MORE germs to KILL the Itch. Today at : KEN ANSVILLE DRUG STORE T- W Everyone will have a part 1 the U. & Savings Bond great "Oppoc tonltr Drive May 16-June SO. Tin armed forces are responding to the call for volunteer assistance by offering to fly a number of covered wagons to Independence, Mo for a big ceremony marking; opening of the drive. They will then transport the wagons to various Stales. The covered wagons typify, the differ, ance between the terrible hardships the original 49'ers went through in their search for riches and security and how easy H h for the modern 49'er to build for a secure future. Today yom are giTen the opportunity to'mvest ia I). S. Savings Bonds the easy way to pile up rhfres. In so abort years yon will receive $100 for every $15 invested. VA OOOOO0OOOOOO MOTOR PARK THEATRE, Hi-Way 11, Piiik Hill, N. C. "Showpiece of the Carolina's" (ln-A-Car Individual Speakers) Shows At: 7:30 & 9:30 P.M. IOOOOOOOOOOO SUNDAY only May 29th Mystery Thriller Who Is She? II - North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the under signed, duly verified, on or before one year from first publication of h nntice or this notice will be Cotton prices everaged lower dur plead In bar of their recovery. All ing the week with middling 15-13 .persons Indebted to said estate will inch at 32 83 cents per pound. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having this day qualified as exe cutor of the estate of D. M. EzzeL. deceased, late of Duplin County, please make Immediate settlement This the 21st day of April, 1049. Mrs. Mamie Ewell Weeks, Executor; RL 1. Faison. N. C. D. M. EselL estate. 6-3-6t. i t i ml !L L IM I II I II I II ! I I , t Th f Qrtlli off Niiiliiift I ; NORTH CAROLINA will not be deceived by the Big Oil Interests and their im r ted propaganda expert. If Big Oil is so concerned about the people of our S ' - 3 .v l our pocketbooks why did they raise the price of gasoline within the . i t i r months? The truth is obvious. They are fighting the Road Bonds because t te r v increase in taxes to pay for the Bonds' will be the lc per gallon increased gas6 hne tax. Evidently, if there is any increasing to be done, Big Oil wants it all. Starring Alexis Smith, Gig Young, Sydney Green street, Eleanor Parker. Also Color Cartoon MON, V TUES. r ( 1 A MAN CURSED... WITH ETERNAL YOUTH! . -N 7 Also Vera Vagge Comedy WEEK BEGINNING MAY 30th Monday and TUESDAY: Fighter Squadron With Edmond O'Brien, Robert Stack, And John Rodney. WEDNESDAY: w; Matinee at 3:00 o'clock' . . With Lawrence Tierney and Jricilla Lane. ft THURSDAY and FRIDAY That Wonderful Urge Starring Tyrone Power and Gene Tierney, ' SATURDAY , DOUBLE FEATURE The Big Sombrero t Starring Gene Autry. 5 AND- ' . SsppsAtSea With Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. . ALSO T!T5 FrUIAL ' I . lyf Big Oil attempts to scafe-confuse-and-r' -' aat by saying how much money the State will I 3 without the Road Bonds. But they don't t i you that the War-accumulated surplus is ilo- t used up. They don't tell you that WITH- '( r THE ROAD BONDS, THE HIGHWAY MISSION WILL NOT HAVE AS MUCH 1 "NEY TO BUILD ROADS IN THE NEXT .1 : :.7EE YEARS AS IT WILL HAVE SPENT IN 1 IE PAST THREE, i j ?J i . My The Road Bonds are absolutely fieeaVd If i ' rth Carolina is to carry out its PROGRAM Q.F I PROGRESS. - WM W4tMUS(M: -1 We sfpnd now on the thfeshold. Every r-te North Carolina has acted courageously to 'i vest in its own people and future the result ' I been magnificent. SO SHALL IT 0E again i en June 4tfj when the 'decision of 'The Big Oil I Interests vff The People of North Carolina" hr J rendered at the polls. A if b ROAD FACTS Itosida Prof vmmt ' ha oovlno of 12.000 miles ot secondary roads and placing 33.000 miles ot roads Whmt Is The BmtUr The plan calls for the in all-weather conditions. Who inn BetsefU Frmm TfcU Proof? Directly or Indirectly, every man, woman, and chilo I i will benefit. For example, only one-third ot me miles traveled by school ousts are now poved Pro duce to market problems will be eosed to thous- onos. Nor will the city folks who Benefited most from the Rood Program of the I920's be nsiwno only their rural fellow dHiens. It the tlnoncloi ' pressure for secondary rood Improvements e Ueved, the Highway Commission will nave -more .! money to spend for primary roods.' Good roods ors good for everyone. Wh Wtt F Fsw Thm Program? Highway utem The Road Bonds will not increas . land taxes. Income taxes, tales taxes, etc Reoov ' ments on the bonds will be made from nigrmrov . funds, riot the General Fund We repeat tor am . , photla, The only Increase In taxation will be the le per oallon Increatsd gasoline tax. Ct Tfet) PretrsisM B VtMti The bonds will bo Issued only ot they ore needed ' and only as the money con be used wisely and eco ;., ' nomtoafly. It is not anticipated that the pragrom , can pe oompietea in Jour yean but the outhoriio tion tor o full ptatet) In Fmur nlng. ill program Is necessary for sound pkm Wfty Kmi AmOprkM thm Bowda GrewJtMflw? Althouarw ot iutt stated, the money need net r bwiowed ell ot one time, sound planning nece titatet its being authorized an ot one time, tt Highway Commission knows the money It ovoilabi rood plans can be pro'ctad on. o brood ecoie ' Proper planning will enable builders to operate or long ttretchss ot o time. This will speed up eon ft BtrucHon and save money. The expansive cost ot moving heavy equipment from one small lob to an ' other con bo minimized.1: Long haul of moteriai from Its point of origin con be reduced : Ifk WI3 ftws XSbmf, fTfestM, smst Boso Thm Ut)Nnr I T Co 4 jmUT ; The law trdflte now much It to be spent In each county. There con be no question therefore ot ' : , egultriblo cnstrlbutJon. , Th C6une.ll of Stat w10 opprove the sole of the bonds os the money n needed. iM Stat Highway Commission will make the con tracts, v WEDNESDAY only - Hot as today's headlines! mil T1 jri?l A" . XV C.1D0.G Bra j aiHE Also Serial THITHS. ft FRI. Greatett Western" ever made! if n sc r SATURDA BIG DOUBLE FEATURE ' - Action Packed Thrilla ! Sens Of Advcnfcre With Russell Haydcn, And Lynne Roberts. 1 v ALSO I P ' " ! ' i
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 27, 1949, edition 1
4
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