Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / June 2, 1950, edition 1 / Page 4
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EENANSVILLE, NCr.TII THE DUPLIN TIMES Published each Friday la 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, Kenansvllle, N. C. . as second class matter. TELEPHONES Kenansvllle, 255-6 Warsaw 50-7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $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, tconomic and agricultural interests of Duplin County. sWrta Carolina Armyworm Threat Facing Farmers t By L. F. WEEKS Duplin County Agent The armyworm has appeared in a few fields in widely scattered areas in the state. Reports indicate some wheat and oat fields in Pam lico, Iredell, Pasquotank, Curri tuck, Hyde and Beaufort Counties are infested. Also Craven County. This pest appeared in some 15 counties last year and caused ex tensive losses, some fields being stripped and the heads of the grain destroyed. Fields having heavy dense foliage are most heavily in fested. Corn or other row crops near grain fields should be watched for migration of worms. Grass in fence rows and along roadways is often stripped when the pest de velops in such areas. The adult stage, the armyworm moth, lays its eggs in the heavy grassy under growth. The worms when first hatched are very small but in a few days will develop to 1 1-2 inch long. Worms 1-2 inch long will feed for a week to 10 days. While the infestations are not widespread in any area growers are urged to examine their fields immediately and at weekly inter vals. If stripping of leaves is evi dent check the base of the plants as the pest hides during the day and feeds late in the evening. A poisoned bait spread late in the evening at the rate of about 15 pounds of wet bait to the acre will be found effective. It is made by mixing 1 pound of paris green or white arsenic (dry) with 25 pounds of wheat bran (1-2 of the brand may be substituted with saw dust). Mix 1 pint of molasses with 2 gallons water and stir into bran poison mixture. Add water to make a crumbly mass which can be spread J)y hand. Broadcast evenly throughout infested area. Do not leave in piles and spread all the bait each day. Do not store on the farm. There will be no harm to wild life if spread properly. A 5 DDT dust may be used Warsaw Fish Market CREATORS AND MAINTAINERS OF LOWER PRICES ON QUALITY SEA FOODS (Next Door to AM Both Wholesale and Retail Know Your Fish or Know Your Fishman WILLIS BARTLETT FREE Pfceae 13M . WE JRESSING WARSAW N. C DELIVER M. F. ALLEN, JR. General Insurance Kenansville, II. C. Kenansyille's Only N. C CONSOLIDATED HIDE CO., INC I Foot of Waynesborough Avenue I , ,t , Former Weil's Brickyard GOLDSBOR6, N.!C. t f PHONE 1532 OR 2330 COLLECT I J" IF CALLED IMMEDIATELY WE WILL "UK UP DEAD CATTLE, MULES AND HOGS h BUY Insurance tonM) C. .GLLNA at the rate of 25 to 30 pounds per acre or a 10 toxaphene dust may be used at the rate of 22 to 25 pounds per acre. These materials may also be used as a spray but an emulsion product will need to be used. Follow direction on con tainer. A 5 to 10 methoxychlor dust will be safer in infected pas tures where livestock is involved. Farmers are urged to keep in touch with their county agent as to treatment, results and known areas of infestation. For Best Prices and Con plete Job on Monuments. See or Write Rev. H. J. Vhaley BEULAV1LLE " " -" c 3 WATCHES CLOCKS WATCH BANDS RINGS ON ORDER Repairing Watches, Clocks, Jewelry PRESTON HOLMES DUPLIN MERCANTILE CO. IN KENANSYDLLE Insurance Agency i iflllli: J InUnaW Unjm "a V 'JbVlflijfc 1 5und.r SHlool U f 1 .FrPiije.:-ia..LflamiL - SCRIPTURE: Habakkuk. DEVOTIONAL BEADING: Ftalm ST 1-7. Questioning God Lesson for June 4, 1950 HABAKKUK has been called the prophet who dared to ask Ood questions. If he had not asked these questions he would not have bad his answers, so we ought to be thank ful for him. If he had meekly "tak. en It" without (so to speak) talking back to God, he himself might never have be came a prophet and we might have missed the truth which he was en abled to see. If there bad been morning papers In those days, Habak kuk would seldom have read any thing good in them. As for local news, it was all scan dal. Murders, Judges dispensing Injustice In the courts, good people having a very hard time of it . . . Abroad, things looked dark. The giant nation of Babylonia was on the march westward, and it did not look as If the nation of Judah had what it would take to stop an In vasion. Habakknk, a deeply sensi tive man, could not brush It all off. He could not say, "Oh well, what can yon expect?" or "I see the boys are at It again." He could not think of what waa going on around him as If It were an a story, a murder mystery to be enjoyed In an easy chair. He could not say "It Is fate" and let It go at that. He was desperate in his mind about It all. "Under mine eyes out rage and injury go on," he said (1:3, Mofiatt's translation). He dared to ask the question. Why? Why does God permit such things? God's Terrible Answer GOD HAD AN ANSWER for Hab akkuk, but it did not satisfy him at first: indeed it disturbed him deeply, for the answer looked worse than the original problem. The essence of it was this (Hab. 2:5-11): God had indeed seen the wicked ways of the nation of Judah, and was going to punish the whole country by defeat in war. He was bringing up against them the Babylonians (Chaldeans), an ag gressive, fighting, ruthless nation. Sooner or later Babylon and Judah would clash, and then Smash! The Prophet Still Asks Questions HABAKKUK KNEW very wen what the Babylonian armies were like and what they had been doing. But could it be true that God would actually make use of a wicked nation like Babylonia? God was "of purer eyes than to behold evil;" how then could a good God use the cruel violence of godless armies, even for a righteous pur pose? The Babylonians were not God's people they did not worship him or know him. How could God nse his enemies to punish his own people? Does God justify the means by the end? Does God do evil that, good may come? Habakkuk, in short, was troubled by exactly the same kind of ques tions that have always arisen when men who believe in a righteous God ponder the meaning of the power of evil. , Faith Comes , Through HABAKKUK never did get . a complete, . logical answer to his doubts. What he did get was something more valuable. It was a two-fold answer. First, WAIT AND SEE. (2:1-8.) The crushing of Judah by Babylon would not be the last chapter of history. God hai yet to settle his account with Babylon, and "Ood does settle all Us accounts In October." s, The other part of the answer Is: THE JUST SHALL LIVE BY FAITH, The I meaning here (2:4) la that there are two kinds of life, two types of character, two sorts of men. One Is the man of pride and unfaith, the other Is the man of faith. Unfaith kills, faith makes alive. Unfaith trembles and falls, faith endures. . . So it 10 with men and mo tions. At that time yea might : have thought, Babylon will anr vlve, Judah has no chance. Bat ' in the light of history, we knew i It was Babylon that perished, I Judah that endured. Godlese neis may have terrible power, ' I bar since it Is (odlessness. It ' " has no final power against the .. real God. - ' ' ?' ' So Habakkuk who began by ask lng questions, came out into glor ious faith. The great poem 'with which his book closes Is a, bold confession of faith. No longer' com plaining, he cries out; "The Lord God is my strength' ;s t-. (Conyrllht by tha Intarnatlonal eaimrtl of Relljtloua Education on bahali of 40 Pro'"j;nt d'nomtnatlona, IWHHa fey WNU raaturaa.) - f"' kJ Dr. Foreman T " "1 PA T;"'V A SLX-ROOM HOUSE AND EtGHT ACRES . OF GOOD FARM LAND. A SMALL TOBACCO ALLOT 'i, 4; , " ' 1 MENT. ALSO VERY GOOD BUILDING LOTS. TmS IS LOCATED NORTH OF WARSAW TOWN LINE AND NEAR THE WARSAW HIGH SCHOOL. THIS PROPERTY IS ON PINE STREET, CENTER STREET, GUM STREET, AND DUDLEY AVENUE. J YOU MAY SEE OR CALL S. E. PARKER ANY TIME BETWEEN 6:00 AND 9:00 P. M. THIS WEEK PHONE No. IS 456. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having this day qualified-as Exe cutor of the estate of David John Middleton, deceased, late of Duplin County, North Carolina, this It to notify all persona bavins claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned duly verified on or before one year from date of last publication of this notice or this notice will be plead In bar of their recovery. All persons In debted to said estate will please make immediate payment This the 11th day of April, 1050. W. E .Middleton, Executor of David John Middleton estate. . 6-2-6t. WEM NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA, DUPLIN COUNTY. The undersigned, Chas. F. Cates & Sons, Inc., will sell to the. high est bidder for cash at the plant of Chas. F. Cates & Sons, Inc., In the Town of Faison, North Carolina, on Monday, May 29, 1950, at twelve o'clock M., the following described personal property, to-wit: 44 used closed redwood tanks, 11' 5" in diameter on the bottom, 10' 11" in diameter on the top, 8' 6" high, 2 staves, 3" bottom and top, flat iron hoops, 4900 gal lons capacity each. These tanks were shipped to Chas. F. Cates & Sons Jnc, by A. Greenspon Pipe Company, Inc., under contract dated 9-11-47 and were not acceptable and they are being sold for the account of A Greenspon Pipe Company, Inc., for the purpose of satisfying claims held by Chas. F. Cates & Sons, Inc. This the 15th day of May ,1950. Chas. F. Cates & Sons, Inc. Faison, N. C. -26-2L c NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having this day qualified as Ad' minlstrator of the estate of Dora Quinn, deceased, late of Duplin County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against her said estate to present them to the undersigned Admini strator on or before the 26th day of April, 1951, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said es tate will please make immediate payment This 26th day of April, 1950. JA. D. Quinn, Administrator V ' Dora Quinn Estate, : ? Kenansvllle, N. C. Rt 1. 6-2-6 1. VBO NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the pow er of sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed by Graham Powell and wife, Lois Powell, to Vance B. Gavin, Trustee, on the oooooooooooo FOQ SALE SASH, DOORS, SHEET EQC WiCr t TH ROCK WOOL, PLASTER, t!M3,' CEMENT ' BRICK, MORTAR, PAINTS, TER RA-COTTA PD?E; DRAIN 1HJE, WIHTE ASBESTOS SIDING, ASPHALT SHINGLES, ALL' KlNbS - ROOFIN J, BRICK 5th day of January, 1949, and re corded In the public registry of Duplin County in Book 449, page 150 and default having been made in the notes thereby secured and the same being by its terms, sub ject to foreclosure, the undersign ed Trustee at the request of the owner and holder of the indebted ness will offer for sale and will sell to the highest bidder for cash at the court house door in' Kenans ville, North Carolina, on Monday, June 5, 1950, at the hour of 12 o' clock noon, all of the following de scribed tract or parcel of land: . A certain tract of land situate in Island Creek Township, Duplin County, North Carolina, described as follows: a BEGINNING at aslake in the line between Jacob XCavenaugh's and Monroe English's line, James D. English corner, and runs with James D. Englishs line about West 105 feet to a stake; and thence about South 115V& feet to a stake; thence about East 105 feet to a stake in the aforementioned line; thence about North 94V& feet to the beginning, containing Y acre more or less. Also being the same land which is described in deed record ed in the Public Registry of Duplin County in Book 439 at Page 550. This sale will be made subject to prior encumbrances. A deposit of 10 will be re quested of the successful bidder as evidence of good faith. This 2nd day of May, 1950. VANCE B GAVIN, Trustee. 6-2-KPCA i NOTICE OF SUMMONS In The Superior Court NORTH CAROLINA, DUPLIN COUNTY. Town of Warsaw vs W. A. Bowden, Josephine Bowdeii, Lillian L. Bowden, William A. Bowden, Johnnie F. Gooding, Lot tie Gooding, Mary Lily , Martin, Johnnie Martin, and Jesse Martin. The defendants W. A. Bowden, Josephine Bowden, Lillian L. Bow den, and William A. Bowden,, will take notice that an action entitled as above, the nature . of which' is fully set out in the duly verified complaint of the plaintiff, hereto fore filed in this matter, to which reference is had as follows: To forclose tax liens for unpaid taxes for tbe indicated years and amounts, exclusive of interest, penalties and costs:. 1929 $2625 1930 $26.25 1931 31.50 - 1932 31.50 1933 18.90 1934 19.90 1935 18.90 1936 18.90 1937 18.90 1938 18.90 1939 18.90 1940 11.20 1941 11.20 1942 11.20 OOOOOOOOOOOOI Houses V f AND APARTMENTS For Rent Warsaw And v -Kenansville A. J. STRICKLAND "' PHONE 554" ". " WARSAW, N. C, '"iy-,. ye V "" t '. ooonoooooooo Dr. II. 7j Cokvell OPTOMETRIST " ' Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted. Next DoOr To Cavensugh " Chevrolet Company i Permanent Office In WALLACE, N. C. ' TYflDAll i fttctklmHlStuiltutii. ' ' R 1 . 4-toow falb It Alltae, ft 5 "-'ion. ' ' ' C 6 " SomS I Pwart'i CtmHMlaa 9 5 4J O-O-Oor, 1944; Alllat V t-Mlnoari rivar obtidgad IIXLm . wild Mtal, 117. , f fl ' XCv t-WaalUlIdKhrad. ' 9 9 t Noway wnaaoan H ft Q 'yipoiM, Noiriaffaf Witt attack, f j It Itajaalia 'raaklia calb X for unctniorad arail, 3 S 1 ' C 1943 11.20 1944 ; 1945 11.20 1946 '11.20 1947 33.70 1948 33.70 Which are assessed against the fol lowing land In Duplin County, North Carolina, Warsaw Township: "Being Lot No. 12 of Block No. 2 as appears on the .official tax map for the Town of Warsaw as recorded in Plat Book 1 at page 152 of the Duplin Registry". Which said lands are the property for the defendants above named. And the defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Duplin County in the courthouse in Kenansvllle, North Carolina on the 15th day of June, 1950 and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiff filed in said action, on or before the 8th day of July, 1950 or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the com plaint. This the 15th day of May, 1950. R. V. Wells. Clerk, Superior Court 6-9-4t. State College Hints To Home Makers Home dressmakers who find it difficult to put in a zipper neatly and firmly by machine may wel come the idea of sewing zippers in by hand.. Clothing specialists recommend hand sewing zippers for any kind of fabric where there wont be too much strain. The attractive 'results of this hand-sewin method will please the most particular women for the stitches are hardly visible on the outside. Not only good looks but a more pliable opening is achiev ed by hand stitching zippers. That is why the finest gowns produced, in Paris and New York custom houses are made with hand zippers sewn in by band, specialists say. Newer than the small zippers are even thinner zippers, being used for a really delicate effect, especially In making dainty sum mer sheers."; y. :-s(:i-. When sewing in a zipper, it's im portant first to press a good crease in the placket. To do this; sew up the placket-along the seam with loose machine stitches that will come out easily. Lay open the seam on the wrong side, dampen with a sponge, and press. Then pull out the stitches. For haml sewing, pin in the zipper, laying pins at right angles to the zipper. The zipper is placed right when, the front edge of the placket lies' just past the teeth of the zipper -- about, 1-16 pf an inch. After pinning, sew in zipper by hand, taking stitches right next to the zipper - - so close that the needle brushes the side of the. metal. . The specialists prefer a version of the back stitch in sewing, using tiny stitches and going back only half as far as the last stitch each time. j ,1 1 SIT uuauiy icenemcerea. lqngrAller;? Drir a Frrrn.'r r ;J i c I IIVV I rff 1 it i v WE BUILDJTQ A STANDARD ii nJt Tp A PRICE SMITH CONCRETE 0:i'CTS :i(i:!STo:i, ii.!c?.fJvdF;:3::E3Ji2w CJJCP v LIST PLLNTIFULS .. v. : in.'; :';:"":;;,; Dairy products are in the fore front on the list of foods expected to be most plentiful in June, Miss Hilda Clonts,ihbm agent Reported this vetR., ' Second honors on the June list gb to broilers and fryers. In addi tion,' heavy cold storage holdings and seasonal culling of flocks will Insure- plentiful supplies'1 of hens on most markets. 1 " ' Plentiful among the vegetables will Include beans, corn,, cabbage, tomatoes, : new. Irish potatoes., -.; In addition, both eggs and honey will be found abundant. , i ,f PAUL COTTLE DIES Paul Cottle, 58, of Chinquapin, died at his home Wednesday morn ing, May 24, at 9:30 o'clock.' Funer al services were held at the home Thursday afternoon at 2:30, con ducted oy tne nev. is. n. uresnam. Burial was In Pickett Cemetery at Chinquapin. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Eliza Cottle; one son, Allen Cottle; one daughter, Maude Lee Cottle, both of the home; three sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Mitchell of Clinton, Mrs. Dora Jones and Em ily Hicks of Wilmington. - REMEMBER TODAY . TOMORROW WITH A PHOTOGRAPH BY KRAFT'S STUDIO IN MOUNT OLIVE Phones 217-J or 230 COMMERCIAL PHOIOGRAPHA A SPECIALTY Duplin Tines KENANSVILLE N.C. 3 Oak and Fine Firewood FINE, $5.00 -er Cord OAK, $6.00 per cord On the premises. Stacked along roadway near Williams' Croesc roads, 5 miles from Warsaw. SEE OR CALL . $ CO cords pine and 30 cords oak cut in 4-ft: leno-ths. K George Pv Pridgen nrtmrB j St n 0 a wm at r " 1. Vl,llll 1 t t ( DAIHY jbEALE'RS;j?ri";V"i ' DUPLIN MERCANTILE COMPANY r A j T r- . - ; J-.. &MRS. M. MTIEGPEN ,' BenlavMIf, N. C, , , , 1 m 1
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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June 2, 1950, edition 1
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