Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Aug. 16, 1951, edition 1 / Page 16
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a- t 4 i " Mrs. Hull r. Smith. EepreseAtattTe I "r. and Mrs. Roy Brown and chll rea of Kenansvllle visited la town Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Pickett and Fred and Mr, Lanie Heath visited l ira. Mattle Bradshaw who la con fined at her daughter, Mr. C. W. " Sutton's home in Beulaville because ' of illness, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. John D. Hunt went to Cha- pel Hill Thursday to set her sister in law. Miss Alice Hunt. They re turned, to Mrs. Hunts home Frl- day and Miss Hunt left for Miami, : Fla, Satuday to visit her brother who has been critically 111, but d much improved now. : Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bowman and children Bobby and Chuck of Eas- . ton. 111., are visiting her mother, Mrs. Bessie Rackley for a while. Mr. and Mrs. H. . Pippin are visiting her brother CoL Tommy ' Corbln with the USA who is sta- tioned and living with his family the states therefore bis family was unable to come with him. They are visiting their slstr, Mrs. John Ho oks. Jr.'s home in Fremont Mrs. Alvin Maready of Chinqua pin visited her father Mr. Leon Wilson Sunday. . ';.- , Mr. and Mrs. L.' E.' Pope, Mr. and Mrs. James E. Jones and sons Mike and Jimmy, Mr and Mrs. Mel vin Pope and son Harry spent last week at Carolina Beach. ,v . Norwood Baker of Charlotte visit ed his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Jacob last Baker weekend. Mi and Mrs! John Smith of War saw pent Sunday with his father Mr. J. A. Smith and Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Audrey Joyner and Mrs. Jack Joyner' visited In -town Sun day.!; ' f David Berdett of West Va., Is spending some time with his wife and daughter at her parents Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson's borne . - Mr. Grey the dw school prin cipal, his wife and one month old baby boy moved into an apartment In England- He is on a mission to at Mr. and Mrs. Bob Burn's home , Come In And See Our Comeplete Line Of Home Furnishings L. E. Pope's Magnolia toooooooooooooooooooooooa O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o l o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Garage service s;av XL... .... - v ; All ! know is that when you gef it to gether, it should be a Thirty-Six Sup- 1 .. . , ; . ' ,: ' . V er Deluxe! o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 8 o o o o o o o o a o ....You've got an awful wreck there, Mister but if anybody can fix it, we can. Whether it's a leak in your tire or a major repair job, you'll find super-service and know-how, coupled with LOW prices, under our sign. You'll find our servicemen q the quick-but-silent type. The only gas you get Used Gars q goes into your tank. Drive up today see for - fQ yourself. -'V 9 ' See Us For Good O o o o J o o o cr o o o o o r-r' - feSoto Plymouth i' i ttr $:!os & Service' O O o o o o o o o o o o e o o o o o o o o o o o o o o . o o 9 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o C) 0 o Thursday. ' , ;' itit tne indebtedness thereby secur- Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Grubbs and ed and - said deed, of trust being daughter Jor if r.-v- v . , 'by the ., terms thereof subject to relatives in town Saturday night foreclosure, the undersigned trus and were dinner guests of Mr. and tee will of er for sale at public Mrs. N. T. Picketc . Mrs. W. E. Mlcheal of Durham waa dinner guest of Ms, and Mrs. A. Q. Smith Sunday. ! The Young People's class of the Baptist Sunday school spent Sat urday afternoon' at White Lake. Mr. Shelton Battta had a chick en fry for his barn help Saturday night at his tobacco barn. ; i Mr. and Mrs. Parley Potter re cently visited his sister Mrs, Wal ler suntno." 11 y 14 ii,' .-Hvr.v-.f, ( .1 Mrs. John B. Croom had aa her cuests at he1 ("'"'" v wy. end Mr .and Mrs. S. B. Hunter, Jr, and children. . Little Anne Sanderson of Four Oaks is visiting her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Sanderson. Wade Gaylor of Washington. D. C, visited his mother, Mrs. Alice Gaylor recen'ly. ' , :. ,- Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Pone and children Anne and C. H.. Jr.. spent last week at Carolina Beach. Anne visited her- aunts . in Micro and Goldsboro this week. - v Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Powell went to Klnston Thursday and brought his mother Mrs. JDonnle Powell home with them where she spent the wekend. Mr Oscar Drew spent Sunday with his son, O. D. Drew and family Mrs. Oscar Drew is visiting her son Lloyd Drew who has a new baby : in ureensourg, fa, auction to the. highest bidder' for cash at the courthouse door In Ke nansvllle, N. C, at noon on the 19th day of September. 1951, the prop erty conveyed In said deed of trust, the same being in Duplin County, Nor Ji Carolina, and more particu larly described as follows: . ' "Being that certain tract of land known as the Calvin and Mary Wil liams land and BEGINNING at a stake on a ditch, Ussle Darden's cor ner. and runs, with the said ditch west 22 poles to Rheuben Faison's corner, ana Lucy ,Tanns corner: thence with Lucy Tann's line N, 9 E 20 1-4 poles to a short straw pine: thence N. 67 1-2 E. 20 poles to maple; thence S. 31 E, 7 poles to a stake, , Ussle ' Darden's corner, thence her line S. 9 . W. 20 1-2 poles to the beginning, contain ing by estimation 3 916 acres more or less." But this sale wilt be made sub ject to all outstanding and unpaid taxes. , This 15th day of August, 1951. C D. Lee, Trustee By . - , Charles O. Whitley, Atty. 9-6-4T COW F;c.C!::$. PccII . aasj UhiiJ Ul FORT RILEY. KANSAS Pri vate First Class Charles Allen Pow ell,, husband of Dorothy, and son of R. S. Powell both of Magnolia. Private Powell is a member of the U7th Engineer Pontoon Bridge Company ' that built the longest bridge in the United States across the Kansas river at-Fort Riley.: , The floating structure was errec ted after the only connecting link between Fort Biley and Marshall Air Field , was wiped out by the worst flood in the 99 year history 01 toe Army post. Measuring more than I4.8O feet in length, approxi mately 930 feet of the structure span the water of the Kansas riv er. The longest ponton bridge in the world was thrown across the Rhine river at Ramagen, Germany, durinc World! War II. and measur ed approximately 1, 300 feet from neei to neei. , The 317th Engineer Ponton bridge Company Irom Camp McCoy, Wls.r was one of four engineer units from Camp McCoy, Wis., and Camp Car sons, Colo., Ur. be called upon to aid in the huge rehabilitation job at Fort Riley. GARDEN TIME With our humid, hot and shoerj Weather conditions this is the sea son of the year ,or grass and weeds and woe unto you if you let them get ahead of you. , What do you know about the weeds and grasses that aive Vou so much trouble? I recently talked with a man who has gardened for several years but did not know the auierence oetween crab grass and uermuaa grass. Just in case some of the readers of this column are also confused, crab grass is an an ual plant, catching root at all the joints. It is a serious pest at this time of year tout is killed out by cold weather. In the garden it must be controlled by frequent cultiva tion and band pulling. In the lawn It may be killed by special chemi cals sprays. On the other hand, Bermuda grass sometimes called wire grass is a perennial plant, catch in groot at the joints and also send ing out many underground stems by which it spreads rapidly and lives over lrom year to year. Freez ing may kill the above ground stem but not the underground ilam. Clean cultivation, and smothering it with heavy crop growth are about the onl ycontrols. I have killed it In the garden by - covering with mulching paper. . There are many other grasses and weeds that give us trouble in the garden and their are nn mv methods of control. Also, in the rau t tne year we are prone to let'tne weeds so in nartbn nf ih garden' where we have no crops. mcic us win mature millions of seeds for future generations. Many weed seeds remain alive for years in garden soils because they have been buried too deeply. As oon as cultivation brings them clo ser to the surface and conditions are favorable, they immediately germinate. Mr. and Mrs. Farmer - Deposit Your Tobacco Money With Us And Pay Your Bills By Check. Your Cancelled Check : Is Your Proof , Positive Records. anil Of Kit. Olive "Make Our Bank Your Bank" MOUNT OLIVE CALYPSO ASHSVILLE KUpv v.Mtora to the parks atop Mt. Mitchell and Clingman's Dome in the Blue Rid ge and Great Smokey Mountains 6f North CaroUna find themselves lurf n4 Knuth wi'h slight exertion Bat ifs not old age - just' the al titude. Beth peaks are over a nu high. Mitchell soars 8,684 feet a toove sea level and Is the highest mountain', in Eastern American. Clingman's is 6.642 feet Both ere reached by toll-free paved tt&- PirksPopi RALEIGH North Carolina's U SUte Parks drew 464,026 visit ors in the first six months of 1951, as fncreaae of 34,0& over the same period last year. y. .'j.,i';;?;" , Biggest increase was shown' by historic Tort Macon near Atlantic Beach, whose attendance rose to 119,644, an increase of 51317 over the first six months' of 1950. Mt Mitchell staler Pack, now under de velopment on the highest peak in' Eastern America, drew 41,960 vi-' .Cc3 In i 1 L c , , "-' K j'vo ; J' 9!Ci' jior i ; km Spliss a , - We Also Accept ' " - Mac's (Farm Supply FCX Dealer Agent Located E. Main St. WaUace, N. C. Phone 582L Sell yoiir Tobacco In , Wallace And Select Your Home Furnishings From Market Furniture Cor Prices Are Low Good 3-Po. Livmg Room; Suites As Low As $99.50 FREE! 2 End Tables Or Coffee Table With Each Living Room Suite Sold. 4-Pc Bedroom Suites As Low As $104.50 FREE! 2 Vanity Lamps With Each Bed room Suite Sold. These Special Offers Are For A Limited : Time Only , - Stop Where Your Dollars Are Worth More Market Furniture Co Main Street, 3rd Door From Post Office ' Wallace, N. C. v , "Your Credit Is Good Use It" Circular Published Producing Swine 'i ne state Collpfp'ji Fvf,ncin Service popular circular on "liais ing Hogs in North Carolina' 'has just beea revised and brought up to date, and single copies of the new publication are available on request. Authors of the circular, which Is 17 pages in leng h and is illus trated with photographs and draw ings are Jack Kelly, specialist In charge og extension animal hus bandry, and H. A. Stewart, in char ge of swin research. Kelley and Stewart point out that the swine industry furnishes ?TPa.rt 2.f food suPPly 10 rmost North Carolina farm families and the income from cash sales is of considerable importance. Hnn thv add, are grown in every Tar Heel cummuuuy, ana in l50 the state ranked second in the south and in the nation In the number fo hogs produced. - The circular covers such points as selection of stock, sow testing, management of the breeding herd, care at farrowing, time, feed re quirments, shade, sanitation, and preventing losse at , marketing lime.''' ' '-'iivr . Good pasture, say Kelley and Ste wart, is the cheapest single source 0 lfeed for hogs. On the basis of experience and experimental re sults, Ladino clover is the best sin gle grazing plant for swine. , Single copies of "Raising Hogs in North Carolina" issued as exten sion circular no. 238 (revised) may be obtained from the local coun ty agent or by writing the Agri cultural Editor Stnto rVillacs Ct. tion, Raleigh. f v :?ry.:: , . , bUPUN COUNTY NORTH CAROLINA NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND , Under and by virtue1 of the pow er; of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed by Charlie Benjamin and wife . Yiola Benja min, dated the Tenth day of Sep tember,' 1945 and recorded in boek 429 at Page 263 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Duplin County,- North Carolina, default having been made in the payment ' The Ledyard Vault Precision , s I Proof. WA Sell Tobacco At 1 ' ZD REHO'O, ,.'-; Ill FARMVILLE ; f. ; . "Sales That Satisfy" i Ve Are Again Glad To Welcome Our OldFriends and Wish to Make Many Hew Oncs.Our Hew Magna-Lighted Warehouse More Than Doubles OurFloor Space. Ye Are Fully Prepared to Give Yoii Courteous Serviceantf The HIGHEST MARKET PRICE Throughout the . Season. Bring Us . Your F i r s t and You'll Keep Coming. Ve Are All Farmers and liAlsb Knov From Experience How To. Get The TOP DOLLAR For All Tobacco SoId.At : OVER A SOLID -TOV.'ii C1CCEC OF YOUOUSE 'j 1" . . . :'V,'1l-S,,.i:. :,':'-r ii ' it t' i f n nnn n "X f- r- - ' i'( " r .'ftWfsWt'i' f, ?j ',it't.v.)& f i" itibwl ttusmtir d,f AVsw,". '. & "-tit 'i, mjti: ' ) v M iv At--' ' Wjwft W.'.JI tfrM'teXp: r1 fe.'Eil i-.v.r"'..f '. '-' tjii't-iy "&.', I, l ..' w ! ' J Built Age. 1 1 AT "ZAL v 1 It
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Aug. 16, 1951, edition 1
16
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