Till. DUPLIN TIMES
lyhea Iff Aivnst In Carolina ' '
With major crop laid by ripen
ing i summer heat, and the biggesi
t t;... beginning tu flow into
B..rJer f Bell warehouses North
FRIDAY, JULY 29th.. 1949
Carolinians In August turn thoughts
and feet toward lighter things, i :
On August 10 Whiteville cele
brates tobacco market opening
with a festival, first of an annual
series that sweeps up the coast and
inland to mountain hurley openings
Thanksgiving Day. Auction houses
are popular with tourists Wilson
has guided tours.
It
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ie most Beautiful BUY of all?"
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On August 1, Ashevlle's country
club starts a 6-day men's invita
tional golf tournament; on the mid-
cue coast, Hanker ponies will oe
rounded up on the 2ndf and again
on the 10th at Diamond Pens and
Shackleford Bank opposite More
head City. On the 4th, the CS
Coast Guard's best show of the year
goe on, also at Morencad City
Beaufort, with a celebration of its
159th birthday.
In the mountains, the 4th og Aug
ust will see the opening of the 3
day 22nd annual Folk and Moun
tain Music Festival, at AsheviUe.
While it is on, nearby Blowing
Rock puts on its mammoth annual
horse show, August 5 thru 7; on
the 7th Cherokee Indians from
Qualla Reservation will invade
Bent Creek Ranch, 10 miles south-'
west of AsheviUe, for an archery
match with palefaces. On the 8th,
thru 13th, Biltmore Forest country
club courses its annual men's golf
tourney.
In the Piedmont hills on the 9th,
the grandaddy of all N. C. com
munity picnics feed some 10,000
i t Mocksville's annual Masonic Pic
nic; on the 16th thru 18th, Greek
Americans gather in national con
vention nesr Castonia. Toward the
coastal plain, Wilson holds the
Southern Invitational swim meet
on the 11th and 12th. Manns Har
bor, celebrating new roads through
its maritime province, has plan
red a Homecoming it hopes to per
petuate Into an annual event on the
10th.
Blowing Rock rings with music
on the 12th and 14th with concerts
by summering artists; throughout
the three days, Brevaid's famous
Music F.-stival will be underway
with state and national radio hook
i.ps. AsheviUe contributes to the
music on the 13th with a Parade of
Quartets, barber shop brend ex
clusively. On Aug. 18 all N C. plunges into
community activity: a garden club
flower show at Brevard, homecom
ing at The Lost Colony, Ro.ncke
Island, for Virginia Dare's birth
day celebration (on the 20th, Great
er University Day there and at
Nays Head will concentrate most
o the stated great and others); at
Wrightsville Beach, the Carolina
Yacht Club regatta starts for three
davs: Durham puts on a'4-day horse
show; and the 50th annual camp
meeting starts at Falcon
On the 21st thru the 28th the
no.L , . . ,
buiu Annual oau s ureelc camp
meeting starts near Newton. On the
22nd for two weeks the American
ilea Cross aquatic school is on at
Brevard. From the 25th thru the
27th Ashevllle's men will show
their dahlias and other flowers in
the biggest (and perhaps onlv) such
iflower show. In the State Capital
junior baseballers start a statewide
(4-day tournament on the 24th- a
t 'ay later the i-day 4th annual N
C. Horse Show opens at state fair
prounds.
A3 we follow outstanding events
of the season we come to September
22, 23, and 24. These three days
have been designated as the time
when 'Duplin County will portray
its history (in " drama) from the
time of its birth, 1749, up to and
includ'ng the present, 1949, in "The
Duplin Story". Duplin's bi-centen-nial
celebration will be dramatized
in a large amphitheatre near the
site of the Kenansville High School
Birth; Death
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Outlaw
of Mount Olive announce the birth
and death of a daughter, July 18 at
Wayne Memorial Hospital, Golds-
boro. Mrs. Outlaw is the former
Miss Ruth Quinn of Warsaw and
Kenansville
From Our Readers
Rose Hill, N C
July 19, 1949
Duplin Times
Kenansville, N. C.
To the Editor:
I see in the open forum in Sun
day, July 17, a comment on a led
gcr from the Lauriiiburg Exchange
a criticism of a man lighting a cig
arette near a dead woman in ;
cafe. He said, "that was disrespect
lor tne dead".
flow, if reports were true, the
dead party had no respect for them
selves, therefore in my opinion, no
adulteress should be respected, for
they are the cause of homes being
DroKen up.
Now, I will not pretend to say
mat tnis woman was mostly in fault,
but it seems from the reports hi
the paper that her man was the
best of the two.
For it seems he was like Hosea
Jeutenanta In the Air Force It
serve and aeronautical ralings as
navigators. Outstanding g aduates
will receive Regular commissions
and others will have opportun'ty
to compete for Regular commission
during the 3 -year tour of active
luty required of all graduate of
the course. Active duty assign
ments will include navigating the
long-range bombers of the Stra
tegic Air Command or the tr-ins-ports
of the Military Air Trans
port command.
Application for Aviation Cadet
navigator training may be made
at Air Force bases or the U. S.
Army and U. S. Air Force recruit
ing station at the Odd Fellows bui
lding. N John St., Goldsboro.
A new folder "Tobacco Insect
Control in North Carolina" listing
recommended treatment for some
15 different tobacco insect nests
was recently released by State
CollegeExtension Service. Persons
desiring a copy may obtain one
from their County Agent.
oi uia, who advertised his wife
for sale and found himself the
highest bidder, and carried her
back home,
If reports are trHe this man tried
to get his wife to come back and
?nake a home for their six year old
son and himself. This she failed to
do, and proceeded to hang out at
a public plac?, called a restaurant,
where all women of her type seem
to want to be, where she could get
tips and dates. She had no respect
lor herself and why should the
policeman have respect for her.
Now, I nave no criticism to make
against them. Let him light his
cigarette and smoke.
I see the Referendum is to be
held this coming Saturday on to
bacco. The Agriculture Department
is shaking a big stick over the vo
ters head. If it's not carried they
will get nothing for their tobacco,
If it ir carried they get 90 per cent
parity.
So it vas with cotton once upon
time, when the government ad
vanced 12c a pound the first year,
10c per pound the next and 8c per
pound the next.
As the government piles ud to
bacco parity will come down, and
in my opinion, farm control will
then go busted, and the countrv
will be in much worse shape than
when we had no control at all. The
world is now making about five
hundred billion pounds of tobacco
of which the United States is now
making about 2-3 of same. The old
countries began to wake up on t
how to raise tobacco when we put
on control.
The Agriculture Department has
a white elephant on their hands.
The poor tenant farmers of this
country have cut their own throats
by voting for control.' They have to
take what the landlord will give
them. They arc now getting poorer
every year, and they will continue
to vote for crop control. And that
means they nor their children will
own a heme of their own. For the
man who has the tobacco will hold
thesame- QUMMERTIME Is a paradox ai
Canada wont from ten million O far as eating Is concerned. It
pounds in 1935 to 100 million offers aucb a marvelous variety oi
pounds in 1942. We now have to-fre3n 'niits and vegetables at t' ii
bacco men who are showing theprlme an(1 at the 8ame ttme
Canadians how to raise same. Mwfc?
other countries arc also raising tl$ZS2tt&&
lacco thit probably would not be places.
raised had America not put tobac-i Trust Nanev Hntmna of tha r?oal
The commercial early Irish pota
to crop harvested in North Carolina
this year totaled approximately
24,000 acres.
fancy ffoSnez
!'!! III! Mill I
C. B. Griffin
Stand by for a Chevrolet
ic most for your money
It's your monfey you're spending, and you're entitled
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Again . . . NEW
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WftyfcfcM D line 2-Doc Utvk-MU iMiwbI Vn optfomf of Mfiu ceil.
. J "f v-
:o on control. Poods consumer kitchens to co ns
Up with a logical solution a de
licious Vegetable Platter that's pre
pared In practically no time at all
Try it tor summer vegetables at
1 J Vegetable Plattsr
f IbT'imalll' v H cup rel v
I 1h .run I..... Ii n 1.' 1
The Air Force will' enlarge its I tabfaiooMi4 ih2aaic4l
Aviation Cadet Program this fall by mirswlne' hafV01"10
opening an Aviation Cadet naviga- I ess white A. Parsley j
tor school at Ellington Air Force I Wflnh'nnfofeo'onrf i.i.J
Navigator School
At Houston, Texas
Base, Houston, Texas. 1st Sgt. Nor
wood Liles of the Goldsboro Re
cruiting Station announced today
The new school, designed to train
navigators needed aircrews of the
latest types of transports and bom
bers, will be patterned after the
Aviation Cadet Pilot Program in
eligibility requirements and training.
The first class will begin Nov
ember 1, and s new class will fol
low each month thereafter. Approx
imately 100 students will he enrol
led in each class.
During their year of instruction
in the latest methods of radar nav
igation, the Aviation Cadet navi
gators will receive 184 hours of
navigational instruction in "flying
classrooms." For this purpose, the
Air Force will use a new type oi
trainer, the T-29, a version of the
twin-engine Convair airliner, adap
ted for navigation training. '
To be eligible for Aviation Cadet
training, men must be between
the ages of 20 and 26t. must be
either married or single. They must
have at least 2 years of college or
the ability to pass an equivalent
examination. The qualifications for
navigator training are the same as
for pilot training except for vision
and Hearing requirements which
are more stringent in the pilot t a
ining physical examination than in
the physical exam for n-ivigators.
Cadt navigator graduates will
receive commissions as second
i band of Deeunff around center!
Cook In boJilnsisalted water until
tender. Cut ends from beans. Brcalj
onion slices Into rings and sauta
sevoral minutes In vltamlnited mad
garine. Add beans and t cup boili
In- salted waters cook until tenderi
Beat egg white until stilt, told la
ireai mayonnaise, salt and cheese
(Top each tomato halt with generous
po. aful. Broil until lightly bronnj
.ed. On a platter arrange cooked
potatoes In center; green beans oq
lwo sides, topped with onion rings
and broiled t tomato halves on rJ
naming two sides. Garnish wlttt
parsley. Serve j additional vitamin?
Ued margarine and salt and peppef
with potatoes, if desired. Yield! J
Vu-vlrira. "
Jlnu.HHiii.uJW(i.ili -; .
tf,-lA6 TALES
Canine Headliners
TOM FARLEY-
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NEXT to telling yarns about their
own pets, Americans Hire best
to hear tales about the other fel
low's. Pick up any newspaper and
rou lt nearly always find a canine
Item of some sort.
Host common are the stories of
canine fidelity to master but occa
sionally a story of unusual loyalty
to another dog comes up. Such an
Item Is one that appeared recently
In a column In the Buffalo, New
York, Courier Express. It tells the
story of Jack, a diminutive Spits,,
who chose to become a seelng-eye
dog for his canine pal, Raggs, an
Airedale. M
Both dogs formerly were owned
by Dr. W. Carlton Baker and Mrs.
Baker of Willlamsville. N. Y. They
both had distemper when they were
bout eight years old. The dis
ease left Raggs blind but bad no
bad effect on Jack.
Jack soon discovered his friend's
handicap and when he saw Raggs
heading Into some obstruction
would dash after blm and, bumping
hint this way and that with his
body, would steer blm along a safe
course. Both dogs wandered all
tha. irlllaffA. J ark ilwava actlnv
as Kide. steering Rscce to right
by either the doctor or Mrs. Bakef
was sufficient to start Jack off oa
a quest for his charge.
Out In Detroit, Michigan, grade
school students whose pets are la
the dog pound or need new homes
have a rallying cry, "Teacher will
help." "Teacher" Is motherly Mrs.
Blanche Bonner Barber who balls
out pets at the local dog pound be
cause, in most cases, her students
hard working parents cannot afford,
to pay the five dollar fee for r
claiming' lost dogs.
"The sight of -those children's
faces when they hold their pets la
their arms more than repays me.",
says Mrs. Barber, who estimates
that she his paid dog fees foi
about 100 cats and It dogs yearly
since she came to Detroit's Hunter
School.
And there's another sewspapet
story that nicely illustrates some)
thing or other
Down In Memphis. Tennessee,
small boy and his dog sat together.
The boy was equipped with wataff
colors, a cup of water, anil a Urge
sheet of paper. - - '
Now and then be wr"'d d'p M
dog's talMtv the wet 1 ct
the paint Tbe.,' '
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