Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Nov. 4, 1949, edition 1 / Page 2
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c i 1 i- f .1,"' s k 2 (r (Vi - rLASSIFIKD KARS Two cents per worn, nffldnHUi eharse of See. Unless yea have n account with u please send money, stantpa, money order or check with ads. Farmers: nae the Time Classified ads! if you have anything to aell or exchange, or want to buy. we will accept produce for payment. . SEE ME and make appointment to do your auto body and fen der repairs, also replace your broken glasses with new Shatter Proof glass. A. C. HOLLAND, KENANS VILLE. PLENTY OF GOOD WATER FROM A DRILLED WELL. WRITE FOR ILLUSTRATED BOOKLET AND ESTIMATE, GIVING US DIRECTION AND HOW FAR YOU LIVE FROM YOUR POSTOFFICE. HEATER WELL COMPANY, INC RALEIGH, N. C. first Class Plumbing and HEATING All Work Guaranteed ncnvriv n tmmmna TO Phone 226-1 Warsaw, N.C. V..S. FIRE LOSSES 1948 SEVEN HUNDRED AND TWELVE MIL LION DOLLARS MORE THAN ANY YEAR IN HISTORY. PRO TECT YOUR PROPERTY WITH R. W. BLACKMORE Reliable Insurance Service Since September, 1902. -WARSAW, N. C. We hare for Delivery NOW: Aero Cyanamld for tobacco beds, Abroad Seed Rye, Cotton Seed Meal St Hulls, Platinum Feeds. Call on us for your needs in General Merchandise & Farm Supplies. C. E. QUINN COMPANY, KENANS VILLE, N. C. 10-28-4t C MALE HELP WANTED Man with car for route work. 15 to 920 In a day. No experience or capital required. Steady. Write today. : Mr. Mclvey, Candler Bid., Balti more 2, Md. 11-3-et pd. For Sale: Good bright Pea nut hay. $20 per ton at the farm. See W. A. Gilchrist, FJizabethtown, N. C. It. c WANTED: Couple or small family as tenants. Man- must be reliable and sober. Tobacco allotment. New five room house wired for electri city'. Also out bull dines. See S. A. WILLIAMS, f Warsaw, Rt, 1. 10-28-lt pd. CAS SHEETROCK, all lengths, ar- (hi. wmL HAY WIRE Jons' as It lasts S 5.00 to f SJM. CEMENT, PLASTER, WINDOW itwua. ri-. Warsaw, N. C, 11-4-4 C ; T.v,... . PLUMBING To my friends and customers: Owing to loss of neaiw two veara ace I've been unable to carry on with my plumbing. My health ha improved and am now bin t nnina work. I have a food man In with me "and will appreciate any work you may nave to oner in the plumbing line. , Guarantee aa low a price In fixtures and material as-yau can ret from any one. - very respecHuuy, E. C. Newton . ; KenansvUle, N. C. I0-2-2tC - ..- - SWEET POTATOES FOR SALE No. 2's 2 cents per pound or $1.00 per bu. For 5 bushels or mere, write and we will deliver. - LINDON SOUTHERLAND, - Rt 1, Magnolia, N. C. WANT A SPITZ PUP? See Mrs. Floyd Heath, Pink Hill, N. C. , SHOES For real comfort and lone life - are the Chester-Aires. Heel-toToe Cushion Insole. . Air Conditioned. Orthopedie Arch Sup port and Heel if desired. Made and guaranteed by the Charles Chester Shoe Co., of Brockton, Mass. Those shoes are not sold through stores. See or contact Robert E. HoUlnf sworth, Kenansville, N C. Author ised Salesman. JPhone 2S5-2 10-14-2t pd. -v Engagement Mr. and Mrs. Otto Bruckhaus of Elton, La; announce the engage ment of their daughter, Adeline Nell, to William James Middleton, Jr., son Of Mrs. - WlUlam James Middleton and the late Mr. Middle ton of Warsaw. The wedding will take place on December 24 in Elton. CREATE WALLS OF BEAUTY WITH VENETIAN BUNDS 9W afrWMWftWW 1 V ' I r r- - I i ' AFTER A VenetUn blind offers a new "wall" for better arrangement. Venetian blinds, traditionally maiea to windows, are also ideal fur solving those impossible decorating problems in which windows are not involved. Unsightly walls become areas or beauty when draped" with floor-to-ceiling Venetian blinds; unwanted doors can be made to vanish, so can ungainly plumb ing piDes, wall protuberances and other architectural faults that plague the home decorator. , To Make a Wall One commori nroblem solved by a VenrV - i oiind is the lack of fur'""i'e space on the atair wall iifcfore-right). In small homes, where stairs - descend into living or dining rooms and , space is at a premium, this prob lem of the tapering stair wall is a major one. New wall surface can be .'rented quickly and easily by employing a large Venetian blind as a backdrop for furni ture grouping (After-above). The blind, screening the gaping stair opening, not only creates an illusion of solid "wall" but one of spaciousness. Decorative Backgrounds This space magic also may be practiced with large Venetian blinds in tiny bedrooms or other rramped rooms to dispel that jncomfortable "closeness." In addition, Venetian blinds ' . swrrijjBwfM i i I 31 .?A:i BEFORE A wait-consuming stair. are invaluable as Dure decorat ing aids. They serve as smart DacKgrounas lor all types of fur niture traditional and func tionalor. used with draneries. for creating the impression of wiiiuuws un weuis minus uiem. Available in wood or metal, modern blinds may be obtained in a wide variety of colors to maicn au : decorating (scnemes. There are a few basic rules in choosing color. To make a blind a decorative focal point. i match the color of the slats to a sofa tr other major piece; key in the iapes wun. me wan or rugs. io suoaue, just reverse tne process. piece of candy from Quinn's store in Kenansville the next day, dis covered it was labeled "P. T. Foun tain": Returning to town Mr. Dau- ghtry carried Mr. Qulnn to his home, knowing of course at that late hour the clerk in Quinn's store, who was ignorant of the whole mat ter, was on pins to get home to his family. Qulnn thanked them for the ride and walked on to his store. The obligation, Mr. Daughtry ex plained, was made some time ago when Mr. Quinn picked him up on his way home. Quinn, without say ing a word, drove to his own home, into the back yard, cut off the the motor, got out and went into the house to bed, leaving Daughtry standing out in the back yard, ex pecting him to come back any min ute. So much for Pete's and Daugh- try's escapades. Before the meet'ng adjourned It was evident that some Lions were going to get their dan der raised before the sun rose on Thursday morning. It was voted, unanimously, that Lion Holland call each member who was absent, the morning of the. following day at 4 o'clock and remind him that he was missed at the meeting. Just what will take place at -the next meeting remains to be seen. On the serious side, the Lions Club voted to hold its annual tur key shoot in the usual field on the Beulaville highway Saturday, Nov ember 19th. There will be plenty of turkeys, enough to supply about everybody in Kenansville and some of you Lions in Warsaw. Plan now fellows to come out and get your Thanksgiving turkey. M P06 TALES" Lrl Companion Dogs CfaSg Bv TOM FARLEY 1 : For That Occasion ' , Look'sYour Best v Let us arrange your hair Jntb L. n ' X . flattering halo of soft loose waves J to accent your cnarm io assure r your partner that his Is the pret-J tlest girl at the dance. - You want your new permanent to be at- - tractive, adaptable, fussless just' the , 1 sort required by this Season's ;exact-: - ing fashions just the sort our skilled f operators excell in. , , . ' Lenoir Beauty Shop : : TV -. i M JT m Mrs. Ollie Folsom Uorton. Owner E. Caswell St. Kinston ' , Companion Dogs V By TOM FARLEY- Wallace Market Million Tops It Symphony Membership Drive To Make Children's Concert Possible The drive for N. C. Symphony memberships in Rose Hill will make possible an admission-free concert for children of this area, according to Mr. H. E. Latham, Symphony chairman. The drive which has been under way for some time will provide the funds to bring the North Carolina Symphony under the direction of Benjamin Swalin to Rose Hill for concerts next season. . . ine children s concerts are a unique service of the Symphony For the children, the concerts have become a very special event, as their letters to Dr. Swalin testify. "Come back again next year be cause I want to hear your concert i play again," wrote a boy in Banner Elk. "All of us enjoyed seeing and hearing the different groups of ln- ; struments. Please come back, next -.' year and every year," was the mess , age from a third-grader in Roanoke Rapids. "-vt',vf;itut 130,000 children heard the con certs last season. One concert in . Rocky Mount was so crowded that it had to be played-in a ball park to accomodate. the 6,000 children that were clamoring to hear It. ; Mrs. Fred B. MoCall of Chapel Hill heads the Children's Division, and knows the musical likes of the ' children and the background infor mation they need to enjoy it ; Mr. Latham explained that when a person takes out a membership in the Symphony Society he Is not y providing several ev- '""i of I enjoyment for 1 ' ', but Rose Hill is Mr. Ben Harrell. Any person whose membership is 'not personally solicited may obtain it by sending their name and address and (2.00 to Mr. Harrell in Rose Hill. Lions Meet, Ride s PAGE PETE QUINN v ' The Kenansville Lions met for their regular supper meeting at the Kenansville Cafe Wednesday night. President M. F. Allen presided. Following the supper Lion Halley Daughtry gave a detailed descrip tion of the business trip he, Colon Holland and Pete Qulnn recently made down towards Chinquapin. - According to Lion Daughtry, fol lowing the fire last week at the Peter Kornegay house in Kenans ville, he picked up Holland and Qulnn on their way up town from the fire. They drove along casually until they reached the intersection. Daughtry recalled an obligation he Owed Pete. He turned the truck towards Chinquapin.. Knowing that Mr j Quinn was anxious to get back to his store; he stepped on the ae- celeratpr for a short distance out of town. Then he slowed down to about 10 to 15 miles an hour and gave Pete a nice tour; ' going to Chinquapin, P. T. Fountain's Store, Beulaville and back to Kenansv.!i'e. T'y jr! !e frf -rit sA"i r The books were closed Saturday on another season on the Wallace Tobacco Market. In the opinion of warehousemen, farmers and buyers, it was the most successful and sat isfactory season in the history of the market. Gross sales for the 1949 season, as reported by Sales Supervisor J. C. Gregory, came to 11,403,388 pounds. This total topped last year's volume by better than . 60,000 pounds, and leaves the Wallace market at the head of the list of One-sale bright leaf markets with respect to poundage. Money paid out to farmers selling on the Wal lace market this year was $5,498, 783.63, for a season average of 148; 22 per 100 pounds. ; LI College Glee Club Joe West, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. West of Warsaw, has been sel ected as a member of the Mart Hill College glee club for the year 1949-50. . , ' " The glee club, under the direct ion of Miss Elizabeth Souther, Is composed of 124 students. In addi tion to performing numerous times on the campus, the club will appear in concerts at various places during the year. "'"".'?!''". Outlaw's Briige -'V V' : The Annual Halloween party will be held Saturday night in the 1 school auditorium. All are Invited. 1 Also wear halloween costumes if you like. An evening of fun Is being planned, -."r ' -Wil Mesdames Eric Berger,j Remus Creel and Elmo Blizzard attended the Duplin County Council of Home Demonstration , Clubs in Kenans ville.; ,." V.Vt;. V:-; V Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Sutton and children of LaGrange spent Sunday wlbt Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Parker. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dupree and Kenneth have been visiting rela tives In Winter Haven, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Smith of K!n Ston wore vir'fors v T . ; it. A. r --' OOZY, the small newcomer to the O nursery school at the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind, refused to leave her seat when the other children rose to play group games. At the end of class, she had to be helped to her feet and led from the room.' She was literally paralysed by fear of movement Yet. ' two months fatter, Susy waa romping about the Insti tute playground, aa nimble and nat ural in her play as any other four. year-old In the world. Beside her bounced a Cocker Spaniel, who aeemed to take pride In the fact his little mistress could keep pace with bis wildest antics. Far from being- a lone miracle, Buy's, case typifies the adjustment to normalcy which Institute - stu dents are able to make through the use of dogs as companions. While the Institute haa been famous for more than a century for its aca demic and vocational train! ns. es pecially adapted to the needs of buna children from kindergarten through high school age, the dog' project was, lust begun last fail when the first student-operated kennel waa built. Now fourteen children, of all ages, are enrolled In animal training classes. They train- their doge in simple obedience, keep them well groomed, and make them leashes in the manual work-, shop. Summers are spent at the acnooi camp: in tne nerasnires where the dogs frolic and sport with their young masters. The pro gram comes to fruition when the atudenta graduate and take the dogs they have worked with home as their own pets. Dr. Merle B. Frampton, school fear from which blind children suffer is the feeling of being- iso lated In a kldd of perpetual obstacle race In which they are competing with sighted people. Once they learn they can move about as freely as people who see, they gain a confidence that enables them to enjoy the normal experiences of childhood. The ' best way to van quish fear is to give them a dog, say Institute educators. When a child arrives at the In stitute, he is apt to have been pampered by a pitying mother or father who never allowed him to do anything for himself. Conse quently, he. has no confidence In performing any act -on hla own. Understanding teachers cannot give him the feeling of security his own pet does. For one thug. Dr. Framp ton points ut, whUe the dogs are never regarded as guides, they do serve to keep their small masters out of the path of obstacles. The sighted person la embarrassed when be clumsily trips over a rug or bumps into a chair. Multlnlv thla feeling by a hundredfold, says Dr. Frampton, and you will have some Idea of what blind child feels when he constantly run) into ob jects he cannot see. . At present. Cockers. Collies. Dal matians, and Boxers are belnc used In the project Teachers are trying now to determine what breeds are best for the work. The younger children, for example, seem to be more at home with small or me- 'dlum slsed dogs. But no matter what breeds may finally be chosen, one central fact is already known: training with dog companions has You will be served by the following beauticians: Miss Doris O'Neal ' Miss Evelyn Heath Miss Reruf Cook " Miss Isabell Conway c principals who initiated the project f reduced the work of Institute edu explainer that the most crippling tcatora by about one-third. Mr. add Mrs. Isham Byrd and children of Warsaw visited Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Outlaw Sunday. James: Parker visited Mr. and Mrs! Albert Nichols at Sims during the week end. ' , u li injiij ,:;,,, Officers Enjoy The Duplin County Law Enforce! ment Officers Association enjoyed a barbecue supper at Kennedy's Cafe in Wallace last week. Prior to the supper the officers engaged in a shooting match. Patrolman Brooks scored the highest mark, rating 89 out of a possible 100. . . Patrolman Earl Whitaker of War saw is president of the association and Deputy ? Sheriff Nicholson of Kenansville Is Secretary. ; MODEL THEATRE : ' ' BBIJVILLE,,N.'C.'l;;t PROGRAM WEEK OCT. M . ; Sunday & Monday.. , 1 CONNECTICUTT 1 'K YANKEE' With BINd taOSBX Tuesday Jk Wednesday , APARTMENT i With JEAN CHAIN, ' , '' V? And WM.,ipLDEN f Thursday - Double Feature V LOADED PISTOLS; J Witt GENE AUTRY ' tv .-- ' "- A.ND ' 3 - FLYING DUCES R- With LAUREL BXKDY fT- YT i Hi-Vay Patrol "; ' ':' i-: ::iC N. C. Highway Patrol will make a colorful addition to its regular uniform this winter ' a bright yel low raincoat with luminous bands on sleeves, shoulders and back. The new coats were purchased at the cost of $11.84 each and the ad dition of the luminous bands will permit the patrolmen to be seen more quickly at night . . The coats will be distributed to patrolmen as fast as their black raincoats wear out ' " : If., : . ' FOR Farmers & Stockmen We Do Custom Feed Mixing To Order MR. FARMER, YOU FURNISH THE CORN, WE WILL SUPPLY THE SUPPLEMENTS, WILL MIX AND SACK YOUR FEED FOR YOU. Manufacturers Of The FAMOUS EIIRICIIED Rll MEAL If! J WE BUY AND SELL CORN RT.2 MT. OLIVE, N. C. - Friday only V TK2 TI LANA TV C- -1 V XTS. ALL" , X. i I tJoiv Patterns-, ? Lovely CcIctq ; ; ; v Visit our rug department, and see how easy It '.is to rejuvenate your. whole room through simply lidding one of these all wool, 9 X 12 ft. - rugs, in patterns that are equally at home in ' modern or traditional rooms. Floral, geomet ric, provincial and hooked designs , : . V plain broadlooms of a beautif.il quality . . . all await . .. your choosing. We have all sizes or can fit your room with a floor plan rug'-".''"'' ' -' . ,14 , 1 V i
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Nov. 4, 1949, edition 1
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