Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / March 2, 1951, edition 1 / Page 4
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fcapiis EevtvaJs ' - the - 16.000 Southern 7 Saptlst Churches cast of the Mississippi Elver are to enter into revival Easter Sunday. Thl is known a "Baptist SlmuKaneoua Revivals". It will be the largest number of (hurdles and the greatest number ( people to engage In revival ef fort In the history of the world, v : We Shall Pray For A Revival i There is to be an unbroxen chain : of prayer for thirty days previous to the beginning of these revivals, the cooperating churches taking . turns .of being open and having people in them engaged in praver : for 34 hour periods. Each church is to engage In spec ' Ul week of prayer the week pre vious to the revival as follows. . Monday might the 'deacons In prayer at the church. ,." "4 Tuesday night all officers, tea chers, and leaders in Sunday School and Training Unions, and Mission ary organizations In prayer t the church. " v: -Wednesday night all the church in prayer at the church. Thursday. Friday and Saturday nights community prayer meeting In homes. Much Interest Is being manifest ed in the forth coming State-wide, South-wide Baptist Simultaneous . Evangelistic Crusade. 'i1 Genuine Slump ScrJ Oysters Steamed and en Half Shell WIDEUTKB DIAtXMl ILEV'S BARBECUE , Office Supplies , AND EQUIPMEJJT r -DESKS, CHAIRS. FILING CABINETS I LEDGERS. BINDERS, SHEETS and INDEX J.n II. Ccrter ,Cc.?::.y .ir, KINSTON.N. C IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC Prices Up -Sellfor Cash . - DEUVEB OUH PLANT ' 'i yayi:e ag:hcultu.m worn i::c. SOUTH JOHN STREET, GOLDSBORO, N. C Build to a STANDARD .ci to a PRICE!' - CONCRETE INCORFORATE1 Pbeae S412 THE DUPLIN TIMES , Published each Friday In KenansvUie, N. C. Cemnty. Seat ol DUPLIN COUNTY ' ' - - . Sdltsrial business and printing plant, KenansvUie, N. C . J. EORERT CRADT. EDITOR OWNER . " Bstered at the Poet Office. Knansvill, N. & as second class matter . ' TILlFHOIf I -.7; ' " . k . Kenansvine, U5-9 " n SUBSCBLrnON BATES: 3.00 per year In DupUn County Lenetr, Jones, Onslow, PenJcr. Sampson and Wayne, cou Ilea; .I3.C9 1 rj oukUe tLls area w North Carolina; and $4.00 Per year C ?Uera. -';"(.- ,. I t A Esmecrs-c J eeo.'.3u!c SuJ All of the 72 Missionary Baptist Associations in the state have set up efficient organizations to pre pare for and promote the crusade. Thirty of the thirty-eight cnurcn es in the Eastern Association have definitely decided to cooperate In the Crusade, and .the other, eight churches will probably get Teady to cooperate by March 25th, when the preaching phases of the Cru sade begins. Churches of the Eastern Asso ciation that, are making definite plans to cooperate in the1 crusade are: . ': ' -i Alum Springs, Dobson's Chapel, ML Olive, Bear Marsh, Faison, Mt Vernon, Beulaville, Garland, New Hope, Calypso, Jngold. Boss H1U, Cedar Fork, Island Creek, Bowan, Center, Johnson's, Sharon, Shlloh, Clinton, Junes' Chapel. Concord, Magnolia, Slloam, Corinth, Mt GH ead, Turkey, Garner's Chapel, War saw, Union Grove. ; r-A t - i , Baptists throughout Eastern As sociation are eagerly looking for ward to Sunday, March 11. On that day at 3 p.m. in the Warsaw church, a big rally of pastors, church offi cials, and hundreds of members will gather for fellowship. Informa tion, inspiration, and a season of song and prayer. The keynote speaker will be Dr. J. C. Canlpe, Director of the Department of Evangelism of the North Carolina Baptist State Convention. .... ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE TO CREDITORS - Having qualified as Administra tor ef the estate of Jeff C. Mc Lendon, deceased,, late- of Duplin fnnntv North 47rnlliu. this la tn notify aU persons having claims' against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at 1123 Bartlett Avenue, Elirabeth City, North Carolina, on or before the 23rd day of February, 1952, or this notice will be pleaded In bar ft 1 TCDUCTS sunston, N. C. i U J u" ,-' f rates f'rrf ' ed on remsest, ,1, devc". i to the material, educs.: jn&t iral Interea's cf Duplin County. IB. I v.,'iuflii MatUu Interruptions Lease fer Much 4, 1951 PEOPLE KEEP making your life . snorter every day. For time Is the stuff of which life Is made, and you never do have a full M hours a day. After taking out what bar to ha innt in ilaen, ' I eating and so on. and tak in g out What" has to be spent ea your Job, whatever It is, there still ought to be a few hours to call your own. But If you : are like most people, you live from one ln- L Or. Foreman tarrtintlon ' to an- other. It It isn't the telephone If s the door-bell. The more Important you are. the more you are likely to h biterruDted. Once there was a teacher who became president of the college where he had taught, in later veers he mourned the change. "It mm to me." he said, "I never mt a consecutive , half-hour any more to think about anything. No day Is ever what I planned. Life has become one long series of In terruptlons. . e ! Unscheduled Stops THE LITE of the Matter himself, to Judge from what we read In the Gospels, was a long series of in- terrupUons. The tenth chapter of Mark Is a good example. Jesus him self st this time bad one great mini In mind; the Cross. He was going up to Jerusalem not to talk to beg gars or to listen to lawyers' argu ments or to bold interviews with puzzled young people. He was going to die. Wv ,-'-;:,V!.s p'V-'v A hi ' death-read might be spared Intemptlena.. He ecnld net be Massed If be - said te taterrupters one and ' ' ail: "Sorry, I eaat be belhered. Cee any assistants If there I . aayllUmg ya want done. ; 1 But iesus did not say anything of- the kind. He did not fume over tne unscheduled Stops on his life's high way. He took, time to clear up mis-, understandings: be took time for little children when even his best friends thought he ought not to be disturbed; he took time to answer the question of the rich young man; he did not . brush off Jsmes and John when they came to him with their Ul-eonsldered petition; he even took time to take care of a beggar's Mnlslrlea by the Wayslda IESUS DID not always take the Initiative In every sltuaton, though indeed he controlled every situa tion, When the Pharisees asked him about marriage be did. not say. MLefs not Ulk about mar riage; let me suggest the toplo of salvation Instead." Whensthe young man ran up to him, Jesus did not ask: "Did you have an appoint ment for an interview?" Jesus not only did not resent other- people's initiative. He never seems to have resented an Interruption In his life. Dees this example ef Jesus mean that we ought net te plan , ear days ahead ef time, or that we carat never te try to "budg et" ear timer Must we never v plan any project, but always watt tIB ether people suggest ' what we are to doT i, , , , Not at aO. The example of Jeius mesns that if xand when Interrup tions occur, If we share his spirit we shall not be Irritated by them or resent them.-For what Jesua did, always, was to make use of the In terruption. Each one was turned in to a "Wayside Ministry." indeed, a Urge part-some' would ssy the larger part-of Jesus' life was made up of Just such by-toe-wsy wunis- tries.;. v r , r, ' - , " 4 : ;.!'A. , f ' life's Ey-the-Waya j ' '. - It OW MANY of Jesus' teachings we would never have had. If no one had Interrupted him or asked him questions! How many of his miracles would never Have been done If he bad refuted to perform any but those he planned and sched uled himself! It Is whst we do "by the way" that makes up Ufa's serv ice, for the most part ;, ' , T In Jesus' story of the Good Sa maritan (no doubt an Incident from real life) we are not tola what were the original errands of the priest, the Levite and the Samari tan. Very likely the first two were on time for their appointments.' But the priest and the Lsvits missed a wonderful chance, Just because the poor beaten traveler was not, so te speak, on their agenda. The Samaritan was delayed, end maybe bothered, by what be 6 i for the mat. In trouble. Eat-with! he wss silling to do by the way. something he had not planned for at aT, won him the immortality of tS e t-'aster! praise. ' -! t-r BUrtefa M I r , t M.a.l Cc- I v i 1 - 4 la U9 lit i 1 keMll Sy hnj a s c 1 t m- In. Tula I. rstt. t 'Hons i - 1 e-..: Zl pk : t s r nnent , y cf rebreeT, 1" 1. L. L. ' I A3- jnfc" .t tl JXf C, Hale- V'TI. , ' I' Eaiolh This .week and per haps the first two or three days of next week will, far all practical purposes, decide the Issues of the 19S1 General Assembly. - - Unless liberal forces csn develop some badly-lacking leadership and coordination of efforts within that period they might as well go borne and let the conservative "bold-the liners" have the legislature to themselves. Because. If they don't get organized -- and quickly -- the conservative group will be able to push through Just what it wants. At the start of the session, the Assembly was split into three camps. They were (1) a small, close- knit group of anti-Scott conserva tives pledged to no new taxes and no new spending; . (2) a small, loosely -coordinated group of ad ministration-supporting liberals, pledged to a program of what they considered needs for expansion of state services even If several new taxes or expansion of old ones were necessary; and (3) the very large group of legislators, pledged to neither side but apparently In terested in "doing what is best for our State." " v; v"-.- Conservative group (1), backed by big business and big lobbyists, had two primary aims - defeating Kerr Scott In every way possible. and lining up support and ammunl tion for the 1952 gubernatorial campaign In which-they hope to take over control of the State, which they lost with the defeat of Charley Johnson. ; ;'?x'v '-! , liberal group (2) had as Its aims an "expansion of needed services", increasing of appropriations to meet rising costs of operation and at least keep services up to par, and political support and campaign issues that would put another lib eral leader in the Governor's Man sion 'come 1952. y. . ? , i Both of these two groups have been tussling for control of the third, group, made up to a large degree of freshman legislators. P In the Senate the conservatives are fairly .well in control. They are led by sueh high-octane, hotel- room legislating specialists as Riv ers Johnson of Duplin, Grady Ran kin of Gaston; John Larkins.'of Jones and apparently have been receiving at least token aid from Lt-Gov. H. P. Taylor. Julian Alls brook of Halifax has been a voice crying: In the wilderness as leader of the liberals in the Senate in fact, be has been referred to as "minority leader of the Senate." . On the House side, Larry Moore of Wilson, E. T, Boat of Cabarrus, Bob Lassiter of Mecklenburg, John Regan of Robeson, and C. Wayland Sprulll of Bertie all veterans are carrying the conservative bill. At first they were ably assisted by Speaker Frank Taylor, particularly in stacking the important commit tees, but Taylor now seems to have lost control of the group - - if he ever had if '. if-4:.: " ' Liberal forces have had no lead er up until now. Fred Boyster's defeat as candidate for the speak ership' left him impotent. John Umstead's trigger temper leaves him out as choice to head up the liberals. Alonzo Edwards, immedi ate past president of the Farm Bu reau, has not been able to rally the boys. About the only possibility is Arthur Klrkman of High Point, who moved into the limelight last week when he carried the fight tor a resolution putting the House on record as favoring ''adequate" in creased appropriations for public schools. . ' , ' 7?'. The liberals' trouble has been the- same as that of the Mexican army too many generals. If the cc::e in today and let our 4 ,1 ' ' ! S'j:i TMl ANALYZER, Locate All Mechanical Difficultie ' .' And Find The' Cortectioit SEE US FOE 8 I 3. 4 'lt r 15 Our Rates Are R: 0 V 1 k. . - top brass can get together, rally around Klrkman as commander-in-chief, and present a coordinated attack they; might get somewhere. The test run on school problems this week -- with 02 House mem bers voting with the liberal forces t - indicated that on the House side, at least, the liberals can "go for ward'Mf they can only- get the I Otherwise, they .might as well go on home, because they're beat en. The only thing left would be a retreat - or "planned withdrawal", if you like - turresslng the con servatives but losings the battle. - i Interesting iaoter The Ust Gen eral Assembly in 1949 appropriat ed almost ' 138)00,000 more than was recommended by the Advisory Budget. Commission $37,870,910 fo be exact In lis message to the General Assembly, Governor Scott recommended extra appropriations this year totaling yep, you guess ed it 138.000,000. m. : There's, no movement . on foot to do tt, but there has been some Ulk of a way to raise $13,000,000 more a year to give school teachers more pay. Some of the legislators have suggested boosting taxes on liauor. beer and cigarettes.. .They Claim an extra 15-eentra fifth ;levy on liquor would bring in S3,uw,uw; five cents more on a bottle of beer would net, $5,000,000,! iandi two cents more. per. pack of cigarettes would bring In another $8,000,000. It's not likely,' though: Too many legislators expect thefederalT.gov ermnent to. put. extras on; those items and besides the likker, beer and cigarette makers can afford some high-powered lobbying. . ? s j Daughters of. the American Rev olution were backing resolution seeking to reverse the 1948 Legis lature's stand favoring some sort Of world federation, .Kemp Battle of Rocky Mount brought down the house, at' the public hearing with the remark that DAB -should quit being so concerned about their an cestor' and -"start worrying about their descendants", r : 4-i .i.- ,r . ' ; r X lot nas been written about the speech made , by Senator 'Clyde Hoey at , the legUtative session honoring Charles B. Aycock. It was a good speech, a splendid summary of Aycock's life and accomplish ments. "-.",-:'-,,-v;';: rt y- But the show was stolen by for mer Senator-Governor Cam Morri son.' His descriptive stories and anecdotes about Aycock made the "good schooU" governor become a living, breathing, very human per son to the hundreds who had never seen, the immortal Tar Heel. List ening to Morrison, you relived those days a half century ago.;') ; Some folks. thought it Ironical that Hoey who, as a member of the State Senate, fought Aycock's pro gram should be selected as the mala speaker at a meeting In . Ay- ), ' - A new bill has reached the Gen eral Assembly, calling i for ' some $825,000 to set up an audio-visual program in the State. Department Of Public Instruction and : tinder the direction Si Clyde Erwln, state superintendent, of public instruct ion. - .,-,.. ! .f,-! 1 Thia bill it the result of some of the finest back-stage bickering and maneuvering seen in Raleigh in many a day. v '; : .':7V..' '. The whole thing comes as a re sult of the work done by the North Carolina Communication Study Commission, set up by the 1949 I 4 ' -r son&Ue Jtrt.l "-S - I 1 7 1 'ILLIj, i, c x 1 ictures, radio, etc., in school - On SeDten&er 25, thU commiss ion met to hear a report and recom mendations, by Its executive staff, which had done nearly two, years' research on the problem.-' v "Ehese recommendationat were: establishment of a North Carolina Audio-Visual Commission as the administering agency and appro--priatlon of $593,000 a year. ThU money was to be broken down, giv ing 4200,000 a year on a matching basis to local administrative units of the public schools to buy basic materials; $134,000 a year to es tablish libraries, furnishing films and slides ud other supplies to schools; $144,000 a year available I for allocation to the 12 state-supported institutions of higher edu cation for teacher training;, and other appropriations for admini stration and research. . . - ThU , commission (l would t have been a separate , admlnutraUve unit But a UtUe poliUdng per suaded the study commission to turn thumbs down on this Idea and put it under Clyde Erwln and the State Board of Education and its advisory committee. They would allocate , to the colleges and uni versities. And, , as a compromise, they - took out the provision for matching' funds by local admini strative units. -;v.v ... i Among i the ' atudy , commUgion members who,lpproved these last ( vlgiong 'mtb. Ethel, Perkins Edwards, executive secretary 01 the North Carolina Educatlon. Assocla Uon. , .' ' -- j After agreeing, the study' group took time out to rewrite its report and recommendations, and on the next flay' (Tues. Sept 28) gave iU formal okay to the revised report But Mrs. Edwards was not on hand for thU formal ratification. She kicked up a fuss because it was for mally okayed in her absence; . So- another meeting was held. ThU time, the appropriation for teacher training in audio-vUual methods at, the colleges was. cut out "Leathern (the colleges) get their1 Own money," one study com mission member said. .The bew provision, now In the bill before the Legislature, gives Clyde Erwln a blank check in spending $250, 000 a year for an experimental program. And it seeks another $12, 500 a year for "other activities and duttes-";;'-;:";.- :;'':r ; ". :'vv It may tie coincidence, but Clyde Erwln reportedly U thinking ser iously about running for governor next year. If he does, rumor has It that Mrs. Edwards will toss her hst In, the race to succeed Erwutfas superintendent of public instruct- ion. -I Ir ' Meantime, the audio-visual, pro gram 'as requestedcalU for more than $300,000 a year to be spend In public schools, but doesnt pro vide one dime to train teachers in use of the audio-visual aids. , ' A teacher friend of mine -is' dis gusted. She ' attended a district M. F. ALLEN, JR. General Kenansvillc, II. C. ( Kenansville's'Only ;t : ' 7 No ma.Lur how much you disc and if ,' harrow yen cant correct a poor , , plowing job. Se why not rnt a t-w I tnat gives yon good fub Li t e f ,' first psace? ' ( This IWWn f t can be at.aclt 1 tin i 1,m. r , In ene min"'"-. ? .1 I 1. , i ty. the trartor a J i 1 Con trol, hn r . ii ( 1 uti even depth and tiv , v . rm-l fuiv rows wlih a s. - ua t siin and bottoms te i evu.y so4 cauti.aon. cr 1 1 tUi diiil'W3 I'- l-f " public school . 1. But all that v. -.. 1 vu of the raUes for teachers. I. any teachers were oeman raises ."as their' right" injt pay "It's -no wonder folks are begin ning to call NCEA a 'tew..is un. Ion'" my friend said. "AU you ever hear at the meetings any more U talk about how much they're under paid and what they can do to get the Legislature to give them an other pay raise."' " t' J NOTICE OF SALE ' ' " Under And By Virtue Of Author ity of the undersigned as admini strator of the estate of Willie T. Rackley, deceased, the undersigned will offer for sale for cash, at the residence of Willie T. Rackley in KenansvUie Township, on the lands of C. C: Brown, on'Wednesday, the 14th day of March, 1951,' at the hour of 10:00-A M. the following articles ' of personal property, to wit'-"- :''-.iv"".'''r t:H'' : One 1939 Cnevrolet y'f - One 1934 Plymouth Coup ' ' Corn ' Hogs , ' ... Chickens Household and kitchen furniture " Other personal property. : v AdvertUed this the 31st day of February. 1951: ? - V-.? C. C. Br6wn, Administra tor of the estate of Willie T. Rackley, deceased. - 3-9-2t CCB 0O00OOOC3000 ' for Sale I. v. SASH, DOORS, SHEET ; e6ck; ROCK LATH, EOCK WOOL,, FLASTKR, 'ijMiii--;raiiNTV eick, MOKTAE, PAINTS, TO EA-COTTA PD?E, DSAIN sromaJASPnMr 4 SlTINGIcitL K MS OF BOLt EOOITNs, 5-V ; CEIMPVTIN 'FOO. ff Esic: EaXs;i z.j.cci:a&soii , WALLACE, N rrooooooo c 11 Insurance Insurance Agency "I t.. j Fhim r eon la -k yo.ir parts n4 mmrvir proi.Iems. Or t Srn la pm ih lim ol oar. Wd lik to know ivd aud yoat farm fcua. t t-n 1
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 2, 1951, edition 1
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