KENANSVILLE, NOSTIl CAROLINA t:ie 71 TII.IE3 T II E DUPLIN TIMES Published each Friday In Kenansvllle, N. C, County Seat of DUPLIN COUNTY Editorial business and printing plant, Kenansvllle, N. C. J. ROBERT GRADY, EDITOR OWNER Entered at the Post Office. Kenansville, N. C. a second class matter. TELEPHONES Kenansvllle, 255-8 Warsaw 50-7 SUBSCRIPTION KATES: $3.00 per year In Duplin County ' Lenoir, Jones, Onslow, Pender, Sampson and Wayne coun ties; $3 50 per year outside this area In North Carolina; and Advertising rates furnished on request. i Democratic Journal, devoted to the material, educational, tconomlc and agricultural interests of Duplin County. JWjl AlteCIATTftTTfl si n SCRXJTtrFK: .Acta 18:180:16! Bpav a1'1votl6NAL'lUtADIHa: Isaiah H: Base of Operations Lesson foe March 5, 19M EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having this day qualilied as exe I:. cutor of the estate of Gay Padgett, deceased. late of Duplin County, North Carolina, this is to notify ...all persons having claims against said estate to present them to tlio 'undersigned, duly verified, on or before one year wroiu last publica tion date of this notice or this no tice will be piead in bar of thtii recovery. All persons indebted li said estate will please make imme diate settlement. This the 20th day of September, 1949. George W. Lloyd, Executor Gay Padgett estate. H. T. Ray, Attorney 3-10-6L HTR Speight's AND Coker's TOBACCO SEED A LIMITED STOCK OF GOLDE.V HARVEST SEED FARMERS Hardware Co. f j A bird is known by rti naff, mm X (J bf hit ta'k. ? i MARCH J Conado sjrentt woman J vagkmnv i lurrragt, m. r I muni -mi T iong 1 I of thi Alamo day m Ttun r ! 1 MONTH . I T Birthday of Uthtr lur J j f botanist, 5 X - I International Woman's n j J i- do P j J-Lz- sj Bortte frvetn Monihw ir V and Mrrimac K 3 stiNG California ta.'thquokt, C (j WHQ" 193J 5 I II Great Atlantic starts j t bl.nard, 1888 J j. IN WARSAW TYNDAIL FUNERAL HOME I IV MOUNT OLTV II -me rf Wr"-noUn Pbm 7 Knrtal Amnclaflow Funeral Director. tJanlmlmem' nrh;ilp- frvk "lav or nbrhl MRS. M. M. THIGPEN Beulfiillc. N. C. Representative For WARSAW FLORAL COMPANY WARSAW, N. C. M. F.ALLEN, JR. General Insurance Kenansville, N. C. Kenansville's Only Insurance Agency D. H. CARLTON INSURANCE AGENCY WARSAW, NORTH CAROLINA Life - Fire - Slorm - Automobile, etc. Telephone 3496 Warsaw, N. C. Warsaw Fish Market CREATORS AND MAINTAINERS OF LOWER PRICES ON QUALITY SEA FOODS (Next Door to A&P) Both Wholesale and Retail Know Your Fish or Know Your Fishman WILLIS BARTLETT FREE Phone tt-l WE )RESSINQ . WARSAW. N. C. DELIVER f 1 . I . ; I V-?-'--' r , 3 MADAM GLENN , : " GOLDSBORO, N. C. i Gifted Palmist And Psychic Medium never-failing advke on all affairs of life. If nl"f" consult this psychic reader at once. She can and will help you. Consult - her on business, love, marriage, wills, deeds, mortgages. lost and stolen articles and speculations of all kinds. ' .rucie. iftfa jja.ys AND LUCKY NUMBERS f Don't be discouraged If others have failed to" help y0V-SM does what others claim to do. One visit will convince you this MEDIUM and DI ' VINE HEALER is superior to any reader you have ever consulted. Private and Confidential Readings Daily and Sunday s; " Hours: 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. You Must Be Satisfied or No Charge ' Readings for WHITE and COLORED Permanently Located in White 'ouse just outside of City Limit on Smithfield Highway, Route 70, ext to Service Garage. ; f ::!( for Hand Sign, Goldsborq, II. Ca NO REPRESENTATIVES MAKE NO CALLS OUT El 1 I J THERE IS NO RULE In the Bible forbidding Christians to have common sense. You are not sup posed to lay aside your mind when you become a Christian. This hat had many illustrations: let us take Ephesus for one. Put yourself, in imagination, back to the first Christian century. Ask your self: Where can we start a church I where it will do the most good? Where can we put a church jthat will spread o u t, one that is . sure to have daughter churches? Where Dr- Foreman can we reach people of in fluence? Where can we locate, a church where it is certain to be heard of? As your eye ranged over a map of the Empire, you would have lighted on Ephesus as the very place. It was a true capital, not a merely political one. Strategy IT was a master-stroke, selecting Ephesus as a base of operations. It made possible the rapid spread of the Christian faith into the prov ince of Asia. The decision to plant a .church there had been matched by other strategic decisions in Christian history since then. One of these was founding the church in Rome. That was an even greater city and capital than Ephesus, and it has lasted much longer. If the Christian church had been content to be provincial, an right for the smaller towns but afraid to tackle the big ones, if the early church had feared to seat itself in Rome, the whole history of Europe would have been different. When the Roman Empire crumb led, as in time it did, the church rose on its ruins and took its place as the great civilizer of Europe, the strong force that kept a con tinent from decay for nearly thousand years. Our Ancestors FROM THE DAYS of the early Roman church there comes a well-known story which may be true. In the slave market at Rome the Pope saw some handsome small boys, whiter than the aver age Roman, for sale. Who are you? he asked. "Angli," they said Ang les, from far-off marshes along the North Sea. No, smiled the Pope, who was a bit of a punster, you are too good looking for that; "Non Angli sed Angell," not Angles but Angels. Anyway, the church did send some missionaries to far-away Anglia and elsewhere in Northern Europe. It turned out to be another strategic base of operations. Even tually France and Germany and England and the other countries in that part of the world were eon verted to Christianity. The time came when those very nations took the lead in moving into the rest of the world, into the western hemi sphere, "dowp under" to Aus tralia, even into Africa. Where they went, they "carried their relig ion with them. Suppose the church had not thought our ancestors worth converting? Suppose all the colonizing movements of the 16th and following centuries bad been waves of sheer pa gans? It is not mere racial pride to say that the sending of missionaries to those savage peoples of northern Europe was one of the most stra tegic moves ever made by the Christian church. And Today? THE CHURCH has not always been smart Sometimes we have missed the boat. There have been strategic centers we might have occupied and did not.' There was a time, for Instance, when Russia, that mighty nation, was open to Christian teaching. Many who knew that country were saying about 1918 that it was pos sible to capture that land for Christ. But the Christian i church was little Interested ... and now whatever Christianity is there has to stay underground. Farther east, our own Gen eral MacArthur has beea call ing for missionaries to Japan, thousand of them. Japan . Is . wide open to Gospel today as never before. Bat where are ... : the missionaries? Gelng ever . In drlbleti. (:y VS. 'A . Whenever Christianity baa seen a strategic jxjlnt and taken it, fu ture generation have been blessed; whenever we mis our chance, fu ture generations will wonder how wo could have been so blind. . j- - - (Copyright by th. Intern. Unnal council of Religious Education on behalf of 40 Piote.tant denomination; ' Released bar WHO Featuree.l , .T FOR HOSPITAL OR ACCIDENT INSURANCE IN THE WASHING TON NATIONAL INSURANCE CO. .. ' SEE OR CALL ; MORTIMER MAXWELL r")XS 2178, PINX r? L, N. c To: rAT.;c: 2 OFFICE OF " REGISTER OF DEEDS Last month (January) wa by ar the largest month's work In the history of this office. And yet, with steady and efficient- workers and no additional help, all of the work 1 nearer up to date than usual for this time of the year. '." '.v f Our AIM Is to serve you as promptly and efficiently as poss ible, and we sincerely appreciate your co-operation and good will. A. T. Outlaw, Register of Deeds Lila Davla Wells, ' Deputy. Fees collected for mo. of January, $1,414.50, an all-tune record. ADO ANO KUVISION ST AS autiif nnntn if 1 1 1 LA UNI -MM. ftAMO AND MCOtDlHO ASM! .'. FRAN lARHEN FAMOUS sfOHTSOASTH BILL STERN 5w 1 Ylf, CAMEU AH tO MILD ttwt In CdOlMk-CMft rett f ttfjJrtf m mn4 wtNiwn wtto tml(J CoitwU and wily CanMlfw' M lays, iwtHl thrMrt tMKlal tnttiitg WfMKiy ifWM HOT ONI INOtl CAlt Of THROAT IRRITATION 3 Duplin Road Projects Planned A Duplin County project is among those being advertised by the State Highway and Public Works Commission for private con tract letting early in March. The project is part of the Commission's $200,000,000 secondary road pro gram. Bids will be received until March 2. A combined project with Samp son County calls for hard-surfacing 26.4 miles of country roads. Those in Duplin are: Beautancus to Sum merlin; Red Hill via Scott's Store to a point 1.2 miles north of Scott's Store; . and from a point 0.8 miles west of NC 11 near Kornegay via Scott's Store to Kenansville-Mt. Olive Road. Specifications were also adver tised 61 other highway projects throughout the state in the largest letting ever held by the highway commission. Commissioners at their monthly meeting on March 7 will review low bids after which con tracts will '-' awarded. . CAMUS DapHn Ticras KENANSVILLE, N.C. OOOOOOOOOOOt Jurors Drawn For County Court recruiting substations or see your Navy Recruiting unicer. no win be at the Post Office In Wallace each Monday and Tuesday. c fminnn DUbbC "To market, to market, to Ivy t fat pig". Good advice there in that old nursery rhyme, for pout is out of the beat meat buys lUue da., j. Because pork cojk-iy .,ne: sharply from most o;! r Nancy Holmes of the Best foods -consumer kitchens, stiggestn r:iat you bone up on some of its impi 1 1 ant points. For example, cook th; : cuts of pork at least 30 minutes pu pound, making certain that It h'u lost all of Its pinkish color before serving. A low oven temperatuie is preferred for a minimum c( shrink age. And remember that economical cut Of pork can be prepared tc make many a tasty dish. This Cran berry Stuffed Pork Roast is one) Cranberry Stuffed Pork Roast Boned pork shoulder, S to 7 pounds i cup cranberries, chopped t tablespoons aiicnr H loaf day-old bread, cubed 4 teaspoon salt Pepper M teaspoon sag Dash of nutmeg; i tablespoons minced onion t tablespoon chopped parale 1 small apple. peeled ana diced K cup vltamlnizec murgarlne, melted Rub meat inside and out with sail and pepper. Mix cranberries and sugar and let stand. Combine bread cubes with rest of Ingredient. Add cranberries. Fill pocket of pork with stuffing. Sew or lace pocket together with string. Roast In a medium even (350F.) allowing 40 minutes to a pound. Garnish with glased apples Ailed' with- candled cranberries. Serves 8 to 10. Uncle Sam Says , i IvA'.'a- o ' Veterans, Be Wise! gome of yoa have already .received a National Service Life Insaraaee dividend which should be the means f stork tag , aound financial future. The mart veteran, ta addition to aalng some of that money for essential, will put the balanee to work for aim by mvectlng it to V. B. etovtnr Bond. ! Every dividend dollar e4 aid u Saving Bend I a working dollar, busy earning extra . Ihea, after that Initial tttve .mmni. sdgn ap where yea work for t enase of eavinga vanx r , imchpv4r. IA St.. jil li.SIc.ll 5. U.S.T-.,., ' ... Ths fniinwins Dersons were set ected to serve as. jurors during the March term of County Court: , J. A. Bartlett,- J. E. McNellis, D M. Lanier. Warren Brown, Johnnie C Watkins, C, B. Alderman, Afton Pierce .A. L. Hunt. Thomas B. Brown. L. H. Southerland, Alton V. Wells, Lonnie Duff, Jacob Baker, J. R. Mercer, J. H. Turner, L. F. Brown, W. B. Jones, L. T. How ard, James Ray Thomas, Alvtn York Lanier, Jasper Thomas, J. J. Blanton, Henry Kissner, W. B. Dunn, and V. G. Bryan. Perry Exum Sholar, S. H. Mallard, H. L. Register, W. A. Guy. Sam Bass, E. C. Brewer, J. R. Waters, J. L. Craft, James Wood, D. D. English, Finnie Grady, Sidney James Kennedy, Clyde E. Fountain, L. R. Home, Archie Henderson, W. S. Register, A. B. Bordeaux, N. A. Parks, James A. Savage, R. F. Jar man, B. F. Baker, J. B. Sholar, William Bradshaw, Paul -Williams, S. D. Jackson, A. E. Williams, Ben W. Grady .David Wells, O. D. Drew, Sr., Freely Smith, and M. R. Bennett, Jr. Increase Quota In Navy Recruiting Chief D. W. Watson, Navy Re cruiting Officer, announces that en listment quota for this district has been increased to 50 men per month. A further increase of ap proximately forty per cent Is ex pected for the month of March. He also stated that enlistment qualifications have not been low ered and that the Navy will contin ue to enlist only men and women of high mental and moral standards. Young men between the ages of 17 and 31 and young ladies who are high school graduates between the age of 20 and 31 are eligible to apply for enlistment Applications may be made at any of the navy " WILLIAMS FUNERAL HOME Billy Tyndall ; Undertaker Embalmers Ambulance Service Home of Mi Olive Burial Asm. Phone 2265 - Mt OUve, N, C. OOOOOOOOOOOO FOD SALE 3 tf n n r-v m mm l7utf& GIVES FAST RELIEF whn COLD MISIRIU STMKI Jurors Drawn For Superior Court v The following named persons REMEMBER TODAY TOMORROW WITH A PHOTOGRAPH BY KRAFT'S STUDIO IN MOUNT OLIVE Phone 2I7-J or 230 COMMERCIAL PHOIOGKM'HI A SPECIALTY ' SASH, DOOBS, SHEET, EOC ROCK LATH ROCK WOOL, PLASTER, L!1V:Z, CEMENT BRICK, MORTAR, PAINTS, TE5 RA-COTTA PIPE, DRAIN 1ILE, WHITE ASBESTOS SIDING, ASPHALT SHINGLES, ALL KINDS ROLL ROOFING J-V ROOFTNJ,, BRICT - c. u3ner ocn Wot1ac.iN.C OOOOOOOOOOOO N. C CONSOLIDATED HIDE CO.. INC. Foot of Waynesborough Avenue Former Weil's Brickyard GOLDSBORO, N. C. PHONE 1532 OR 2330 COLLECT D7 CALLED IMMEDIATELY WE WILL PICK UP DEAD CATTLE, MULES AND HOGS i FREE OF CHARGE V - i were drawn t6 serve as jurors dur ing the Marcb term of Superior court: FirstWeek - J. Quinn, Leslie Stroud, M. B. Wall, W. F. Taylor, W. E. Bartlett, Adell Cavenaugh, J. E. Andrews, Sr., Ennle Brown. Faison Smith, Fred Smith, T. W. Brogden, J. O. Smith, Wm. F. Dail, David J. Brock, Marvin Dail, Lew is A. Westbrook, Barther L. Brown, Leonard Grady, McCoy Kennedy, William L. Miller, Lester Britt, M. J. Hanchey ,G. O. Parker, W, T. Knowles, H. J. Taylor, Benjamin F. English, E. M. Murphy, Rupert Jones, D. H. Carlton, J. E. Boney, Lewis Henry' Smith, H. D. Korne gay, Dryfus King, Eugent F. Best, J. H. Brice, and L. L. Flowers. Second Week Hez Davis, 3. R. Register, R. J. Robinson, Marvin Bradshaw, Herman H. Quinn, Paul J. Fountain, Maury Savage, Johnnlo Dixon, D. P. Moore, E. E. Maready, I S WATCH ; INSPECTION TIME ANY TIME YOU ARB IN WARSAW AT BAKER'S Jewel Shop lav Warsaw Furnitore Co, Store ' WATCH AND CLOCK REPAIRTNO WORK GUARANTEED ' HOT BOOS I Hamburgera, Cheeseburgers,. All Kind Sandwiches "' Cold Milks, Ice Cresoa Hot Coffee Q::f2's Grill Jmong our best citizens Tour oitlMiuhlp-your standina as a man of worth and respect in your xmm unity U not determinod by your income, thesis of your homo, or whether 01 not you hold down "white) collet" lob. ' ' ,You, aa good oiUaoa, support yonrsolf and your dependents. Tou meet yourob- . ligations. Tou keep your self recpect. Ton are able-a the Mying gooato look any man in tha face. The era the standards by which society tudgea your vain to you community. It is to Just such a aaaae of duty and respon-aibility-of respect lot tha rights of others of community oitiaenshlp that tha baa industry is dedicated la North Carolina. Boor-the beverage of temparano and moderation baa a place in your oomnua- aiityi. ' , . ' Tha industry la working diligently to da serve that place la your eommunlty. It fools that its vital sense of dtixenahip and responsibility is evident in its policy of wil ling cooperation with tha Malt Beverage Division of tha North Carolina ABC Board - - and in its thorough and periodic check . : una at all individuals lleanaod to sell boor. ; J; J'A l.it fVt V ' Pi tti 'W , North Carolina Division A VNITtD STATES BREWERS FOUNDATION, IMS . W i :i"- ,

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