Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / June 23, 1950, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
t'.r it. 1. ... ... f J ! i V ll , ti ll f CLASSIFIED ADS. OLAB8DTKD BATES Twe ceata per wes I hue f 5e. Unless yew have u aeedomt with please lend mmej, stamps, money order ar cketk witk ads. Farmers: aaa the Times Classified adc It yM have smthim to sen r rehanae, or want to bay, w wUl aoeet produce for payment. : ' V. a FIRE LOSSES 1948 SEVEN HUNDRED AND TWELVE MIL LION DOLLARS MORE THAN ANT TEAR IN HISTORY. PRO TECT YOUR PROPERTY WITH B, W. BLACKMOBE Sellable Insurance Service Since September. 1902. 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. .Setuilaville THOMAS HUNTER, USNI VISITS NEW YORK Thomas Hunter, machinist's mate 3c, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hunter of Beulaville, re cently visited New York City when his ship, the destroyer USS Borle, arrived at the Eastern metropolis upon completion of a Naval Reserve training cruise in the Atlantic. Ancient Church Restored. Edenton St. Paul's Episcopal church, dating back from 1736 and damaged by fire last year, has been restored and is visited by numer ous tourists. Original bricks was used in the restoration and much of the ivy clinging to the walls was saved. Lords, Proprietors and Co lonial Governors are buried in the historic graveyard. FREE FERRY SERVICE Misquitoless Island Manteo Free ferry service across Croatan Sound to Roanoke Island is provided by the State of North Carolina. ." The ferries, operating during the summer season on an on-the-hour schedule from 7 a.m. until 6:30 p.m. daily, connect with US high ways 64 and 264 at Mann's Harbor on the mainland. All State-operated ferries in North Carolina are toll-free. The service is year 'round but more frequent In the summer. ; ! CARD OF THANKS "'"We wish to express our grati tude for the many acts- of kindness Shown us in the recent illness and death of our mother. Mrs. G. W. Kennedy. The Family. AUXILIARY MEETS The Ladies Auxiliary of the Free Will Baptist Church met on Saturday in the home of Mrs. Gro ver Hill. Mrs. Lizzie Raynor led the devotional. Prayer was led by Mrs. S. A. Smith. "Advancing with Christ through soul winning," was led by Mrs. Grover Hill assisted by Mesdames Floyd Brown, S. A. Smith and Jesse Nethercutt. Bene diction was pronounced by Mrs. Lydia Nethercutt. The hostess ser ved cookies and iced tea to the 16 guests. ; I WISH TO ANNOUNCE THAT I AM NOW LOCATED IN .KENANSVILLE FOR THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF LAW. - MY OFFICES ARE LOCATED, ON THE SECOND FLOOR OF THE G: R. DAIL BUILDING, FORMERLY OCCUPIED BY. ROBERT C WELLS, nawnt.lNA BEACH COTTAGES for rent S Anartments, I room each with t store, electric refr Iterator, hot water. Front por ches, water front Downstairs apt. $35.00; upstairs apt. $40.00 per week LeJane Apartments on Northern extension. Mrs. H. Ll Potter, telephone 408-6, Carolina Beach, N. C. -30-2t pd. FRIGID AIRE FOR SALE. 6 foot box in rood condition. Good price. See A. W. McNeil at Tide water Power Co., Warsaw, or telephone 339. It pd. Tobacco Flues, ... . Grate Bars, Flue Eyes, Furnace Doors, Lime, Cement, Mortar, Windows and Doors. J. C. RUSS, Warsaw, N. C. 7-7-4t e LOUISANNA PORTO RICO Pota to Plants. Selected slips - treated. $2.50 per 1000 or less on larrer ANNOUNCE BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. Elvis Sumner an nounce the birth of a son, Linwood Earl, Friday June 14, at Memorial General Hospital, Kinston. Mrs. Sumner IS the former Grace Wha ley of Beulaville. BIBLE SCHOOL Bible School commencement was held Friday night at the Hallville Presbyterian church. The director of the school was Miss Ann Jordan of Wilmington and Rev .Sam Hist on. At the close a picnic supper was enjoyed on the lawn. W. M. S. MEETS The WMS met Monday night, June 12 In the Baptist church. De votion was led by Mrs. Sidney Hunter. Program, On The Rocks, was discussed by Mrs. Ruth Sob son, Mrs. A. L .Brown andy-Mrs. Lula Parker after which the group was dismissed with benediction. HONORED Mrs. Christine Kennedy enter tained Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock honoring her son George on his 6th birthday with a weiner roast. Outdoor games and contests were played and hot dogs, cake and iced drinks were served to the 15 little guests. George received a vast assortment of gifts. CIRCLE MEETS Circle No. 2 of the Hallsville Presbyterian Church met Saturday affernoon in the home of Mrs. Ashe Miller. Bible study was led by Mrs. Morris Grady. There were 10 mem bers and 2 visitors present. After benediction the hostess served punch, cookies, mints and nuts. PRESENT PROGRAM The Free-Will' Baptist Orphan age of Middlesex presented a pro gram Monday night in the Free Will Baptist church. MRS. ETHELENE CUPP ACCEPTS HONOR Mrs. Ethelene Parker Cupp, who was invited to join the Wayne Countv ChaDter of the honor socie ty Delta Kappa Gamma, has ac cepted the honor. This is a so ciety for women education who MBtneiisBiiCBini quantities EDITH ANDERSON, Bowden, N. C Or Phone 482, Warsaw. 6-23-2t pd. MALE HELP WANTED Man with car wanted for route work. S19 to f 20 In a day. No ex perience ; or capital required. Steady. Write today. Mr. McVey, Candler BIdr., Baltimore 2, Md. 6-23-2L pd. , Free estimate on remodeling your kitchen;' built-in cabinet and rubber linoleum. Asphalt tile laid and guaranteed. " ' Phone 2677, Box 108, Magnolia 7-16-4t e -. First Class Plumbing- And HEATING All Work Guaranteed GEORGE P, PRIDGEN, Jr. Phone 473 Warsaw, N. C. FARM LOANS Federal Land Bank ' Lour Terms, Low Interest, have done outstanding work in the field of education. Mrs. Cupp is a graduate of EC- TC, taught in the city schools of Wilmington and at present a mem ber of the Beulaville school fac ulty. We congratulate Mrs. Cupp on the' honor she has received. INVITATION Mr. and Mrs. Marion Quinn request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter Vena Mae to Mr. Robert Peterson Hill on Friday the twenty-third of June at eight o'clock in the evening Presbyterian Church Beulaville, North Carolina PERSONALS Miss Myrtle Exum of Warsaw visited her parents Tuesday. Billy Gresham was in Topsail Monday. Mrs. James Miller is ill at her home. Mr. Elbert Smith of Pink Hill, and Mr. Woody Sandlin of Raleigh visited relatives here Monday night. Mrs. S. W. Gresham spent Sun day with Mrs.. Myrtle Cox in Rich- lands . Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Turner of Pink Hill visited Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Sandlin Sr. Sunday. . Roger Craft spent last week in Jacksonville visiting Ricky Craft. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Kennedy Mrs. Jenette Brlnson and Thelma and little Charles Ells Parker vis ited Mrs. Charles Parker in Ral eigh Sunday. Mrs. Brinson remain ed for an extended visit. Dr. and Mrs. Paul Bolin were at Topsail Beach Sunday. Mrs. Harry Rouse of Warsaw visited Mr. and Mrs. George Wha ley Monday . Charlie Miller, USN, Norfolk, spent the week end with his mother Mrs. Kate Miller. '. ' Miss Sally Herring of Raleigh and Miss Myra Butler of Rose Hill visited Mrs. Jim Sandlin and Mrs. Charlton Sandlin Monday. Mr. Walter Gresham, Billy and Ann, and Miss Kate Murlell Boggs visited Topsail Beach Sunday. . Mrs. Jesse Brinson and Jim shop ped in Wallace Saturday . , 1 Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sandlin and Jimmy and Mr. and Mrs. Charlton Sandlin visited in Rose Hill Sat urday. Sunday guests of Mrs. Lula Park er were Mr. and Mrs. Claiborne 1 News .m available throuah the CllntonMrc . Cm-ilia Basden Dies National rarm uw amocmuuu. km nr writ i DE WITT CARS. Secty. Trees, at CLINTON, N. C Quinn and .Jerry Ann of Warsaw and Mrs. Bill Ramsey and son of FayettevlUe. v,-v Mrs. Stokley Bostic is a patient in General Memorial Hospital In Kinston. : " ,;:'-.; : ' . '' Week end guests of Rev, and Mrs. A. L. Brown' were Mrs. Jf R. Hollin of West Palm Beach, Fla. and Mrs. S. H. Howard of Wil mington. A Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Sandlin Jr. attended the Auto Races in Wash ington, N..C. Sunday. ' , Mr, and Mrs. Bill Carroll were Sunday night supper guests of Mrs. C. F. Carroll in Warsaw. . Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sandlin and Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Horne and children and Mr.' and Mrs. Charlton Sandlin and Sherry and Mrs. Harry Jackson and Kay spent Sunday at Topsail. - - t Mrs. W. D. Willis and Devev and Gene of Charlotte visited Rev. and Mrs. A. L. Brown last week. Mrs. Zoa Turner, Mrs. Corbett Wesson of Pink Hill. Mrs. I. J. Sandlin Sr. Mrs. Cal Whaiey and Mrs. Josephine Kennedy vlsltea Mrs. Howard Hocutt in Clayton on Tuesday. Mrs. Horace Brinson and Gene spent the week end in Warsaw with Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Hitter. Brenda Carroll Jackson visited Retha Ann Dixon in Rose Hill last week. Mrs. F. L. Norris and children accompanied Mrs. B. K. Banks and son of Cross Plains, Texas to Ral eigh Monday where they returned to their home after visiting here. Billy Bostic and Jimmy Creech spent last week in Micro visiting Mr. and Mrs. Walter Holland. Attending the Brown-Gattis wed ding in Magnolia were Mrs. C. A. Miller, Mrs. Ada Williams, Misses Polly and Macy Brown, Mrs. Rob ert Matthews and Messrs Don Wil liams and Frank Thomas. Little Jerry Quinn of Warsaw spent last week with fier grandpar ents Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Quinn. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Ritter and daughter visited. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Brinson Monday. County Deaths Funeral Service Held In Warsaw For Thomas Q. Lanier Funeral services were held Fri day afternoon, June 16, at his home for Thomas Quincy Lanier, 72, of Warsaw. The Rev. A .W. Greenlaw, Warsaw Baptist pastor, assisted by Rev. R. L. Crossno, Methodist min ister, officiated. Burial was in Pinecrest Cemetery. He is survived by Mrs. Lanier, the former Missouri Bishop of Du plin County; four sons, W. A., and Jim Lanier, both of Warsaw, C. H. of Magnolia, and Luther of Dur ham; three daughters, Clara, of the home, Mrs. Herbert G. Braswell of Warsaw and Mrs. D. W. Baxter of Magnolia; 30 grandchildren and several great grandchildren; two brothers, Daniel Lanier of Rose Hill and Massey Lanier of Beula ville; three sisters, Mrs. G. S. Mills of Mebane, Mrs. I. L. Evans of Durham and Mrs. Willis Ferrell of High Point. II AKD FC7XTAEK l II WEESE QUALITY 1 " FSCSUCTS Chocolate Milk Lactic Acid (Whole) Milk Buttermilk Cereal ' & Whipping Cream. Also Available From White's Salesmen: J i White's Pasteurized Milk In Glass Bottles (See The Cream Line) V , j i At Onslow Home Mrs! Corilla Basden, 56, daugh n a ami t ,1111b Jarman Basden died Saturday afternoon . at the home of her daughter Mrs. J. i. Whaiey in the Haw Branch Com munity ofOnslow County. immoral SArvlrpS WGTe held OD Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the graveside in the Basden lamuy the home. " She is survived by one daughter Mrs. Whaiey, with whom sne uvea; two brothers', Mack ana rran Radon nf Warsaw: four sisters, Mrs. Effie Hall and Mrs. Lula Kor- negay, both of Pink Hill, Mrs. Dunnie Parker and Miss Maude Basden, both of Jacksonville. Mrs. George Holmes . Buried In Faison Mrs. George W. Holmes, 49, of rfiAri in Wavne Memorial Hospital Sunday at 4:15 a.m. Survi ving are her husDana; a aaugnier, Dorothy of the home; two brothers, Albert Dunbar, Rt. 1, Goldsboro, Walter Dunbar, Rt. 3, Mt ' Olive; tutor. Mrs. Nannie Gage. Ala bama Funeral services were held from the Faison Methodist Church Monday at 4 p.m. conducted by Rev. Dennis Kinlaw, pastor, assist ed hv Rev. Mr. Woody. Baptist minister of Calypso. Burial wasin the Faison Cemetery. Miss Emma Lou Davis Of Lanefield Dies. Miss Emma Lou Davis, 43, dau ghter of the late Jesse W. and Rosa belle Clayton Davis of the Lane- fieid Community died at James Walker Hospital, Wilmington, at 10:05 p.m. Saturday after a Driet illness. Funeral services were nem from the home Monday at 3:30 p.m. conducted by Rev. R. L. Crossno, pastor of the Warsaw Methodist Church. Surviving are three sis ters, Eunice Catherine Davis of the home, Mrs. Sanford Packer, Warsaw, and Mrs. Len L. Flowers, Calypso; three brothers, Talmadge O., Clarence L., and R. C. Davis of the home community. Funeral Mrs. Rachel Quinn Held Near Pink Hill . ... Mrs. Rachel Quinn, 73, widow of John Quinn of near Pink Hill, died at Parrott Memorial Hospital in Kinston, at 9:30 a.m. Sunday after a brief , illness. Funeral services were conducted from the graveside Monday at 4 p.m. by Rev. N. P. Farrior, pastor of the Pink Hill Presbyterian Church. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. DeWltt Lockerraan of Rose Hill; a son, Zennie Quinn of Pink Hill. A. S. BENTON DIES AT AGE 70 YEARS Albert Sidney Benton, 70, of Rose Hill died early Monday in James Walker Hospital after an illness of about two weeks and several months of declining health Funeral services were held on Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the home of his brother Henry Ben ton of Rose Hill with whom he made Ills home and A. M. Benton of Clinton; one sister, Mrs. Nellie Drew of the home community and a number of nieces and nephews, t And Point Vilh Of A Century Of Service To The People Of The ; ; Coastal Carolinas" FEATURING ' 9 i Fine Dairy Product r MISS MACY BRINSON is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Alton Brinson of Beulaville. Her engagement to Jack Brin son, son of Mrs. Cora Brinson of Kenansville and the late Mr. Brin son is announced by her parents. The wedding will take place in October. ; - ' V - HEALTH DEPT. REPORTS ON WORK IN DUPLIN SGHOOLS The Duplin County Health De partment Staff has seen a very busy year. They have rendered many good services to the people of this county. . Among their work, the major services were rendered to the school children, some of which are as follows: (1) 352 childrens' tonsils and ad enoids were removed in the Health Department. 45 patients were re moved at Goldsboro due to heart condition, 68 were removed at Dr. O. L. Parker's Tonsil Clinic In Clinton. This made a total of 465 children who had their tonsils or adenoids removed through the Health Department. This 'required a lot of work on each member of the Staff. Dr. O. L. Parker held clinics each week in the Health Department. He was assisted by Dr. G. V. Gooding arid three nurses. (2) 163 school children were ex amined for glasses, most of them were in need of glasses and re ceived them through our Health Department . (3) 456 school children were ex amined and treated for hookworm. (9) 9 school children were treat ed at the Orthopedic Clinic in Goldsboro and Wilmington, through our Health Department. Many other services were ren dered but these were the major ones. The School Health Program for 1950-51 will permit closer screen ing for other defects that can be corrected, enabling the child to enjoy a healthier life. Attendance at school will greatly Improve, and the child can keep up with class mates and will not have to quit school so early which will make for better citizenship. CORRECTION ; In the account of the TB meeting the names of some elected board Pride To Our VMoreThan AQuaiier HOMOGENIZED grAde MILK ; with vitamin D added n 4 " HOSTESS ICE CREAM ' '." r "The Treat Of Treats" , v :: members were mistakenly left out. We are glad to make the proper , correction by adding the foiling names to the list: Mr. H, A. Par ker, Bowden; Mrs. Charles Ben nett, Rose Hill; Mr. George Ben-' nett, Warsaw; and Mrs. N. B. Boney, -Kenansville. , . , . , " 4-H GIRLS VIE FOR HONORS IN DAIRY DEMONSTRATION k - '' June Is dairy month. Milk pro duction hits its annual high, and according to the U. S. Dept. of Ag riculture, this month may set an all-time high 'record. Trying for a record, too, are some 1000 N. C. girls who are thinking up new ways to use the abundant supply of milk. They are -participating in the 1S50 National 4-H Dairy Foods . JDemonstrkpon program and will vie for topTion-., qrs In county as well as state and national competition ' Awards for outstanding perfor-. mance are provided by the Carna tion (Company,- sponsors - of the program. Gold Medals are -presented to county winners, while each state winner is given a handsome gold watch; A trip to the National, 4-H Club Congress in Chicago next November la in store for eight na tional champions. . v : Maple HDC Meets The Maple HDC met at its usual time last month with 14- members present in. the home t Mrs. Pres ton Sandlin. Family life, food pre servation and educatioa -was dl: cussed. Several book reports we: given. Miss Hilda Clontx gave an Interesting talk on home -freezing. Mrs. George Lanier was honored with a surprise stork shower iAt the close Mrs. Sandlin served re freshments. ' The Ice cream cone originated a half century ago at the St Louis World's Fair. - 4 U '( ; .21 4 - it A. Vs. ' rArr tlant ATTORNEY
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 23, 1950, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75