C I
Has Third Set of Twin
I n . ai 1 MMMMMiiMW
HAMILTON. OHIO Third set of twins iboni to wmm
Daniel Smith, granomoiner, in namuvun, f.v-.,
Lrc fumy 'to 16 children. She is shown with the new umh both
Coys, wh le her husbnd holds 2-year-old twins, Donald (left) and
SSanX and 8-year-old twins. Geraldine (left) and Pauline look on.
' Daughter Myrtlu. 16. a single, is in background .
Drivers lisense Issued In 194?
' Must Be Re-Issued Again In 1951
....
11
it
11
x it,:
" 1 Motorists who obtained renewal
of their driver'! licenses in 1047
under the re-issuance program and
whose birthdays fall early In 1951
will be required to obtain second
renewals In the next few months,
the Department of Motor Vehicles
reminded persons in this category
today. ' .
Motorists who are uncertain as
these motorists will fall on their
birthdays exactly four years from
the 1951 re-newal. .
The department requested that
motorists seeking second renewal
bring their present licenses with
them to their examining sUtlon.
The license will be accepted as evi
dence that the applicant has passed
the road test and ht will be re-
to their license expiration date, quirea to iaxe oniy m wx
should refer to the lower right ' road, eye and road signs phases of
hand corner of their present lie-' the examination. The number on
cue card. " hi present driver's license will be
. Under the driver's licensing pro-' his permanent license number.
ram. licenses expire on the birth- A space wui oe pruviucu m u
day of the motorist four years after
re-Issuance. Since the re-issuance
program began July 1, 1947, some
motorists will not have held their
licenses quite four years, the De
partment pointed out, but in set
ting up the re-issuance schedule,
it was necessary to place the expir-
ation date on the birthday nearest
July I. Explr'atoln date In 1958 for
new license cards for blood type,
tuhiph will be Disced on the card
upon presentation of evidence of
blood type. Since Inclusion of this
information is a public service and
voluntary with the applicant, fail
ure to Dresent this evidence will
not be reason to deny issuance of
the license.
1950 Tobacco Season Conies To Close
Production Estimated 1,241,360,000 Lbs.
The marketing season for the
1960 crop of Eastern North Caro
lina flue-cured tobacco will end
November 17. Volume of sales last
week was extremely light. Accord
ing to the Federal State Market
News Service average prices oy
grades held fairly steady with last
week but general qaulity of effer
ingx was lower.
'. During the twelfth weex only
1387,656 gross pounds moved at an
average of $51.40 per hundred.
This was a new low in weekly ave
rage, dropping 1.23 from last week
and volume of sales was about 6
minion pounds lighter. Gross sales
for the season through Nov. 10
amounted to; 445,847,808 pounds
for an average of $56.51. The 1950
erop outlook as of Nov. 1 for this
type by the U, S. Crop Reporting
Classified
Ads.
i CLAS8im3 sflLTBS
4 Two eeaU per wort, sondmasa
harts of Me. Unleas yew have
aa aeeowat with ma plea tend
veaier. stamps, money order
- or aback wHb ads. Farmer
; M the TtaM ClaaeMsd ads;
'SJ joa fcavo auythlftf to aeU
' . r eschsnre. ar want to bay,
wo will Meat produce for
araaeif '
Board was 429,800,000 pounds. To
tal flue-cured production-was esti
mated to bo 1,241,360,000 pounds.
Most grades Drougnt average
nrices unchanged to S1.00 per
hundred below levels set last week.
The declines were more prevalent
in nondescript ! offerings wnicn
were sold in the largest volume of
the year. A small number of leaf
grades was slightly higher. - r
Although the quality was below
last week, it was considered good
for this late in the season. There
was a larger percentage of -good
and fine offerings but this was
more than offset by increased
amounts of nondescript, damaged
and unsound tobacco. Principal
sales were low to good leaf, fair
and good lugs and smoking leaf
and nondescript.
NOW
DECE7C
decea:
DECEIC
DECEIT
DECEK-
DECEMSZ2 It
IJANBABY I
JANUARY
I ANT) ART
lANOAXXir
JANUAlff It
IANUART 21
JANUARY IS
IANUART It
FEBEUART i
FEBRUARY
. FEBRUAaVY t .
FEBRUARY It
FEBRUARY tt
FEBRUARY tt
FEBRUARY tt
FRAICTLIN AT KENANSVILLE
KSNAIwVILLE AT FRANKLIN
WARSAW AT BJANSVBLLE
, KENANSVILLE XT' MAGNOLIA
. KENANSVHXE , AT RICHLANDS
ROSE HILL AT KENANSVILLE
"KENANSVHXE AT BEULAVILLE
KENANSVHXE AT CHINQUAPIN
' RICHLANDS AT KENANSVILLE
. KENANSVHXE AT B. F. GRADY
.' CALYPSO AT KENANSVHXE
WALLACE AT KENANSVHXE
' KENANSVILLE AT WARSAW
MAGNOLIA AT KENANSVHXE
FAISON AT KENANSVHXE
KENANSVILLE AT FAISON
KENANSVHXE AT ROSE HILL
BEULAVILLE AT KENANSVHXE
KENANSVHXE AT CALYPSO
CHINQUAPIN AT KENANSVHXE
B. F. GRADY AT KENANSVHXE
KENANSVHXE AT WALLACE
FRUITS for fruit cakes. Get
raw now. C E. QUINN CO.
; Kenansrllle. N. C.
lt-t-lt C ..
Thp VlmwThired Stabilization
Pnrnnratlon received about 18 per
cent of weekly gross (ales under
the Government loan program, tea-
son deliveries are around per
Kinston, Tarboro, Farnwffle,
GreenvUle and Bmlthfleld have
closed; Rocky Mount and ' Wilson
will operate through No? 17. ,
Duplin Farcers To
! Elect Coiwilke
During Dcccoifcer
Duplin County" farmers - will
again go to the polls during Dec
ember to choose the fellow farmers
who will represent them as1 County
and Community Production and
Marketing Administration Commit
teemen durlntf the coming year,
says Joe E. Sloan, present Chair
man of the Duplin county ras
Committee. .
Th state PICA Committee has
designated December 14, 1990 as
the date for holding the election
in the SUM. J'v '
Eiialhle votora in each commun
ity will choose from among their
neighbors a Committee consisting
of three regular and two alternate
members. At the same time a dele
gate and alternate delegate is des
ignated to represent the community
at the County convention.
An eligible voter according to
Mr. Sloan, is any owner, operator,
tenant or sharecropper on a farm
which is participating In any pro
gram - administered through the
County PMA. . - . --
Highway It V
Hill To licnznsvills
Be Paved At Last
; At long last, after much specu
lation among residents on the road
weeks of surveying, highway -11
from Kenansville to Pink Hill is
to be repaved. While, repaving the
road will also be widened and the
mHiim . vHtaneri Total distance
I calls for 19.01 miles from a point
V - . . - mr .-111- kl.k
xvou ieci uuuoe JwvoaiwTiu wuitu
is at the intersection of highways
24 and 11 at the Duplin Mercantile
Co. store corner, to a point about
the eastern city limits of Fink Hill
where the present Improved roaa
from Kinston stops. Bids wllT be
accepted in Raleigh on November
28th. ..
.. Highway 11 was among the first
roads in Duplin to be hard surfaced;
Highway officials say It was paved
about 1927 and it la generally con
ceded by everyone that number
11 la flow in warts condition than
any hard surfaced road in the coun
ty. In fact there art many dirt
roads better than No. 11.
. It is exnected that work on the
project will get underway la Jabh-
Mr. and Mrs. H. D .Simmons
visited in Fayetteville Sunday.
I.:r. and Mrs. Graham Hose an
family moved this week to the
Maysvllle Communjty. Also lui.
and Mrs. Marvin Massengil have
moved to near Goldsboro. i
. .. . t '
sUlal3 TCailS ('"WMwl "-
Theatre Sunday
On Sundey, November 19, at 2:00
P. M. a Bible Ulk entitled The
Pathway to Peace" will be given
by T. C. Wilson in the Model
Theatre, in Beulaville. v . : - ? i
Four other interesting uiDie ais
pussions will be siven on following
Kimriava. endina on December 17.
Much information will be gained
from these talks. ,: . ,
, Ail thfe services will be Blven
hv Jehovah's Witnesses, represen-
taUves of the Watchtower Society.
Their work is part of a world
wide Bible educational work car
ried on by Jehovah's Witnesses.
'Thousands of DeoDle here in
North Carolina are hearing these
mA :: tfnfnlntf -milh hnefit
. m a . a... a . "
ttiat will aid them in their Chris
lan activities, -a "".? '
. All Good will people from all
dennminatlons are cordially invited
to come and hear these talks. .No
, e can assure you that v.:.:
present an evening's entertalnme.-.t
for everyone. ; v . '
Cast of characters: BUI Hamp
ton - Ronald Qulnn; Mrs.'Wini&ia
Harrington r Janice Bostlcj Grace
Harrington Romana Batche'or;
Patricia Harrineton Glenda LJ-
wards; BlUy Caldwell - Robert Farl
Simmons;'. Tony Anderson ay
Jones; Sadie Buchanan 'Minnie
Simpson; Francis Patrick O'Flader
ty - Raburn Lanier. ' . ''
I to come ana near uiese miss. iit
Miss Myra Maxwell of Wilson oUect,0M wlu De taken at any
un .,h1 Hava last Week with I 1
spent several days last week with
her sister Mrs. B. F. OuOaw.
Mr. and Mrs. James Parker spent
Sunday night with Mr. and Mrs.
A. J. Nichols at. Sims. .
Dr. Russell Outlaw of Morehead
City was a week end visitor iith
the home ' folks, y i 'f :
Mrs. F. B. Hammond of Fayette
ville and Mrs. W. C. Kornegay of
Albertson visited Mrs. Lottie Ber
ger Monday. - . : .'
: Miss Marie Prater spent Sunday
with her parents. .
Mrs. B. F. Outlaw was hostess
to the AUW at her borne Saturday
afternoon. MIss-Sallie Outlaw call
ed the meeting to order and Mrs.
M. L. Outlaw Jr. led the worship
unrin Tha nrnirram was led bv
Mrs. Lottie Berger. Usual routine
business was; held. Mrs. Outlaw
was assisted in serving refresh
ments during the social hour.
ALBERTSON POST
time.
BEULAVILLE STUDENT
CASTJNPLAY,-!
Bnhprf Craft of : Beulaville will
be a member of the cast when the
Teachers Playhouse, college drama
tic club at East Carolina Teachers
College, presents Thornton Wil
der's play, "Our Town'. ,
Presentation of the pray early
in December will mark the formal
nneninff of the new Little Theatre,
and the first major production of
the players for the present scnooi
year. , , x t
Beulaville Juniors
To Give Play : ;
The Years Ahead," by Eliot
Field, a one-hoiir religious drama
of one act, will be, presented at the
Warsaw Baptist Church, Sunday,
November 26th at the evening wor
ship hour, 7:30. Modern in Its time
and settine. the olay presents a
gripping, message and challenge.
Human and iDlrttual emotions are
stirred by the story revealed. Look
for the answers: Can conflict be-
fwMn Iava anil itnttf Iia anlved to
the satisfaction of youth without
compromise of convictions or at
sires? Should vouth be allowed to
follow visions of service with all
It sacrificial uncertainties or be
persuaded toward activities leading
to' financial security and popular
prestige? Will a business partner
ship be dissolved because two men
differ in attitude toward life's can
to youth? Of what significance a
Christianity on a college campus
today can It find a place in the
lives of foreign students bow study
ins: in' America? Is there a true
depth of character, of ambition
Help Fight TB
r-K e rr F..rK
Marriage licenses have been is
sued by the Duplin County Regis
ter of Deeds to the following:
Rome Kenan and Mildred Da
vis (colored). .
Dsvls Norman Brl&son and
Macy Brlnson (white).
Richard Wynn and Alice Moore
(colored). '
Luther Smith and Lucy Cruse
(white).
Robert G. Powell and Grace
Woodcock (white). , ' :
Boss Benjamin Sutton and Opal
Virginia Outlaw (white).
Thomas T. Dixon and Minnie
Pickett (colored).. .
Joseph Tvln Simpson and Brown
is Ontnn (white). . v '
Lenwood Earl Murphy and Carol
yn Atkinson (white).
All the above names are, from
Duplin County. " ,
... .,- M. ,
Oulbiv's Miz
HEWS
The Community Club will meet
in the school auditorium Saturday
night, Nov. 18. A good program
has been arranged and all are Invited.-
.
Un. Edwin Holt will be hostess
to the BSC at her home Monday
afternoon, Nor, 20. A full attend
ance is urged. Visitors welcomed.
Mr. Snd Mrs. Robert O'Qulnn
announce the birth of a daughter
on Nov. 14. Mr. O'Qalnn la with
the Army at Ft Bennlcg, Ga.
Mrs. Nora Malpass Is visiting In
Hopewell, Va.
The Charlie and Clayton Pad
getts of Jacksonville vlnlted Mr.
and Mrs. IKmusCrtcl ''y.
c-"9 a r- t f - - t?r tt
t ' t r "
CONTINUED FROM FRONT
torney and leader in Legion activi
ties, who joined with Grady and
Thompson and Louis Outlaw, who
introduced him, in expressions of
pride of the accomplishments of
the post. Past Commander Thomp
son recalled tne first organizational
meeting of the post on March 8,
1847, when "the post was started
.knk.tlHa an4 . o,K full nf
knots." He characterized the burft- t
ins of the -mortgage as the un
tying of the last knot. . ..
vaienune caiiea ior reverence f
and hamase In his address, using ":
aa hla nrlnMnll theme the Amerl-
canism stressed by the American '
Legion. He likened that spirit to
that of the unusual flower that
blooms only on the battlefield of
Cullodeh in Ireland, said to have
been nourished by the blood of
patriots who died there. He said
that the spirit of Americanism was
dormant for thousands of years un
til first brought to light at Bunker
Hill to continue to the present and
spread throughout the world in a
concept of freedom.
In closing, the speaker called
upon his (listeners to remember
well the sacrifice of those who
have given their lives to make that
concept of freedom live and grow.
Ha Questioned whether total neace
would eyf come, but. he pointed
out tnat 1 tne unrisuan religion
pointed to" the way to eliminate the
reasons for war through Individ
ual man. j -
Following the formal program
the nienia baskets of the ladles
nrcsent filled the long table in the
hall with fried chicken, ham and
saussge, sandwiches, pickles, pies,
and cakes) And to overflow still
more -'the feast board .there was
barbecue in plenty furnished by
the post v . -
The Maxwell Mill post is a small
itni hut Ita" memhershln extends
into three"; counties Duplin, Le
noir and Wayne by reason of its
location at the meeting of those
counties. Its membership is small
but constant It numbers 70 for
the current year, only seven more
than appeared on the charter dated
March 27, 1047. It is a community
post In its. hall are held religious,
youth and farm meetings, as well
as dances and other occasions pure
ly for pleasure and good fellowship.
CO MARSH
,E7S
"The Junior Class of Beulaville
Hiijh School will Dresent its an
nual play on Friday, November 17
at 8:00 P. M. in the school audi
torlum. ' : ,' '
? "The Party" by Barry Connors,
.... y
t -.s7 '. : . j
w . t to lau i v.i..i La c :, a
v ' 1 t'.e cast to cry with w-.-t, ta
i with them, to share t ir
a. r, to 1 e ti.em ana to
win v. "h 1. n. The cast includes:
Pauy 1 rry vob Ramsey), Charles
i;!i i ( 'r i Dehesh), Joyce Ann
lor it y Jordon), pegsy saiv
cheU (. o..a Mervlns), Martha Bo
nty C "y Lee), N. A. MitcheU
UmJOIU afu vuv ucv(s m vuW
(Alexander i.amsey), Floyd Jones
(Prof.' Bill), and Mrs. Edgar Pol
lock (Mrs. Eamsey).
Rc-!!::.::s D::rd -
i' Tri-County Electric Membership .
Corporation reelected 1830 direct
ors for the ensuing year- at a.
meeting Tuesday.
New officers will he elected at a
call meeting' of the board of di
rectors to be held within the next
few days. V- v.--
Directors are. Fred Outlaw, Mrs.
Vann Smith, L. P. Wells, , Freely
Smith.' Connie Stuckey. Nahunta,
J. A. Davis. J. A. wiuiams, Maion
Keen, Grantham, Lewu outuw. w.
M. Griffin, C M. Braswell. -
yOUTII ; dOROflTTEE 1 ;
MEETS THURSDAY ,
The Youth Committee of the ,
Boara oi Deacons mei wiui u,
termedlstes at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Brown in warsaw
Wednesday evenin. Dr. Alton W.
rt MtiL thani A tfnoll
ureciuiw uiv, ww www.
attendance was enjoyed. The dis
cussion was followed by a social
hour. -
. If V nil anffae fMM tkM. mI..mVIii..
and are Hard of Hearing due to catarrh of
the head, write us NOW for proof of good
results our simple home treatment has a-
coinplished for a great many people. NOTH-"
IN'G 'TO .WEAR. Many past 70 report ear' -
1 "fcn i a t. t u
DT. vNO. 977
DAVENPORT. IOWA
SEND
N O 7
for proof
aid .
33 DAY
tiai orrEX
mmmmmmJmmmWmmmmmtm """"IL1' '" Vtiliwgj
' i Y"'J
mar et&m
lil
wits
jQVITffllOIISS
and announcements,, ; :
S0frt7.C9
lOO tor elkM .
With double envelop
' ondfiMUM
i . l. W E-rJ, distinctive inTitatioO ' -
l!ittrmoTaibed on 25 rtg ,
,JlX& V. cLina-whit vcUtun paper,' '
-v":. ' ring yon fine raisd lettering
UMt ejne&u ox ute
i hibesf quality. -
V
Mr: and Mrs. Alvls Broaden and
aon of Sanford and Mrs. Aycock
of Mt. Olive visited Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Brogden Sunday. ,
. Carlos Davis, Jr., of SUte Col
lege spent the week end with Mr.
and Mrs. C. L. Davis.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie ' Faust of
Suffolk, Vs. spent part of the week
with . Mr.; nd Mrs. J, E. Davis. .
Mrs. David Lane is an operative
patient in Wayne Memorial Hospital.-
i -fcrN
Mr. and Mrs. David Brock and
daughter, I r. and Mr V ? G. Hatch
nd diiv' r and Mrs. Emma Pate
v' '"d 1 . Torn Kelly of Sum-
it
. V' : V rirasrvixs)
" ' Y
IU I ..... . i 4 I Vs'1 V " e?Ce?dJ(W . . .
II! t ' r istasMie.
.sA
- f : v
I -AlBatcLLijK:-.-a wda,
li - . wepocaei car as, u.sur. you oar as,
I li j i ' at borne cards ana Lt-nrsJH;
I I: . choice L. i cr ' ' "
m
reepocse cards, tLzii you cards
at borne cards and iz'Ms&tla:
Come-in today ar ' ' tjvzt -choice
L i cr ' ' ' "
Mis. Paul Gosley
IU Pas CmJLj
Mw. Pil C''i v
Qe.c9aJro.
( i
4 k . J . ,. , i.