Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / March 6, 1952, edition 1 / Page 11
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I C c c s a c 4- t t t c 4. v-. r i .. ....j in Ltafxin j, , CONTINUED FEOM FRONT ,.-mm also sorry that iie waa not at fcome because I would haye anjoy- ed talking with hint too. He wa feeHng better. thM .morning; Mrs. Newkirk said and decided to go to . Rose Hill with some relatives' from Newr yorkjr .-Mrs.! ttewkirtf, told me she was not able to see as good .: . m she once.did. She had been out it gathering eggs .and even though she could not see them she enjoyed Seeling and bringing them In. , I (stopped at C. B.: EaeuV home. 1 . had planned to go into Newkirka 'MUkrood but Mr. Ezzell told me I bad better not since the road was. bad. yl surely didn't "want to get stuck se titctded wTJottpene that vUH until another day; . AkI was riding and noticing the many white E? r- Drive-In i Theatre A Walkice ( ...Thursday - aad Fridayr March -7- r BesfrOf The Badmeirn i Jtobert't - i. Claire JHfAJf t V TREVOR. mmhbiiFMtaMl V Th Trusted Outlaw E03 STEELS' i , Cession In RtiodLt Mark Tetn STEtENS .. t)OW Sunday and Monday, Maroh 9-10 - Here Comes The Groom Bin JaneM CROCZT TOYMAN rSANCHQt TONE Tuesday Wednesday, March 11-18 RlMlllJll$' ay- - f JaBJ MILLAVOti ' ' STEKJWNG Tharsday-aad tFridar. March 13-14 Mark of the Renegade f Rlcardo Cyd vMONTALBAN CHARISSE 8UNDA Y and MONDAY, MARCH 9-19 ' C..T5 TO'iLp3YaLr::3STens. )f 4 f ' . X V) X V L ALbO TUESDAY, MARCH 11 v Kdb Did If : With ANN BLVTH and MARK STEVENS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12 Fort:::s Of Ccplain Blood With LOUIS HAYWARD and PATRICIA MEDINA SERIAL..- ,, ' ' THURSDAY and FRIDAY, MARCH 1J-M- -j. , :. Fl:r.2 Of Ardiy J : With MAUREEN OUARA and JEFF CHANDLER . - , , CARTOON -,t,i SATURDAY, DOUBLE iii:ilY;;;ii!l::3 II!!ls With JOHNNY ..L patches dotting Urge, areas along the read I realised that the farmers bad gotten their , tobacco seed nUnted.and were looking forward 4ea fine crop this year., You probt jlbiy. do not realize now nucn won there is to farming unless you go out and see for yourself. There are hug fields that .have been plowed imd lnta of other work has been done .towards jetting .the spring crops underway. ' j. I have, heard a lot about Lake Tut" so decided I would ride by and see it for myself. It Is going to be a. beautiful place and. should be an outstanding attraction la Duplin County and to many other sections of this area. " It Is toot' only to be, a summer resort but they plan also to be open all winter. The resort will coyer about five acre when com pleted: VTnere wiu-oe awjmimng, dancing and' many other amuse ments. Mr. Fuseell-wat very nice and -showed me around the place and .explained every detail. The walls are finished with cypress and CIILNUAPiy N. C. ; Sunday-Monday, March 9-10 Father's Little Dividend '-I. t Starring V , i ; Speneep-- ' ioun TRACY-. . - DtwiKiiii Abo Shert, News Cartoon : . Tuesday-Wednesday, March 11-12 Fighting Westerner Starring RANDOLPH SCOTT, Also Short and 2 Cartoons . Thursday-Friday, March 18-14 He Kan way 1 ' Starring ,-' Jdk- "'' - Shelly GARFIELD WINTERS Also Short & Cartoon Saturday, March 15 Secret Of Convict Lake ' ' Starring . Glenn Gene FORD TIERNEY Also Cartoons and Serial t WARSAW, N.C. .i .c:a'i rr3 ""z:i L Z ic-:iC;Jt:iyc"Ji::Jto , t;Iar.:nt:.:a ic:t:;tiv: :t:.j"i m klsi el f!:w Catfl!lraafsrvn ' L It uVm wan 'A .. CA1UUOJX. MARCH 15 IKATUKB TIT UCJC rr.CWN f f , c,' Hula Drive 1UVUUV rV f If - a i If 1 4 V - Juniper wood and are very beauti ful. . ,. Whoa I left "Lake Tut" I went on back towards Brke's Store and kept the road just to the left of the tnr I hnfl im Idea where I would come' out but I always did like to n.mki in noui i.rritivrv . Thffre nTtin JwuiHful homes nn f h Is road an J-some very dilapidated ones making quite a contrast. The road-was being worked wtrtcn made rough r'dlng but the- scenery was h....Wnl - I mua Mniiutd and nr. prised when Icame to a little bridge .built over a branch and saw a hand pump ragged up on the bridge. The nli nn rinivn Into Mm watnr and I the pump , wasv fastened to the bridge; . It, must be used by the state road workers. I don t recan,Daoy i ever bw tou uiu ever seeing a pump on a bridge be fore. v:. ,.;?,-:, 'J,''- .J;; nt h . iiZ nf' saw two mama pigs with a litter of . . Hull 11 J At.- X V baby pigs. ;The fat little pig. were cute, running 1 about tne pasture, Ill bet they will make mighty good ' h, L.d. barbecue somedayV ' Above I mentioned the moss hanging In the trees at Mr. amd Mrs. Newkirk's. , To us It is common place, but to the people up north it Is unusual. A girl from Pennsyl vania told me they ordered enough moss from North Carolina to decor ate their auditorium for a Junior- Senlourom and it cost them $100. The next time you see any you can remember it u really worth money. While driving uo a lane to a house, which I had never been to before, I saw a woman and several children raking and burning leaves In the yard. I thought 1 had seen the woman before but was not sure. After talking with her for a min ute I realized I had talked to her on one of my trips last fall. She had recently, moved into this sec- MODEL THEATRE , 6EULAVILL1C, N. C Movies Are Better Than Ever "Why Worry? See A Movie" " Sunday-Monday, March 9-10 Father's Little Dividend fin ... : Starring Spencer ; Elizabeth TRACY TAYLOR i i- - Selected Short Subjects Tueaday-Wedhesday, March 11-12 The Nevadan In Technicolor FORREST TUCKER Also Selected Short Subjects Thursday, Mtrch 13 Fixed. Bayonets MICHAEL O'SHFA Real Story of War Selected Short Subjects Friday-Saturday (Double Feature). Law Of The Tadlands 1 Starrlne TIM. HOI.T v And Billy The Kid Starrlnr BOB STEELE Also Chapter II Don Daredevil 13! ? Thursday and Friday, March 6-T j Ccv!:ry Ccout ROD CAMERONAUDREY LONG : Saturday, March 8 (Double Feature) - FastiQmThe: Bfoiv WithJiimy.Elliaondjiu9eIlHayden .1 j In Technicolor : .fH., ; 1 : j Sunday and Monday, Match 9. and 10 jfj Sfeltetotfl The . . Starrinf Ava .Gardner and James Mason t ' , Tuesday, March JX i ; i Starring Ann Dvorak, Gene Evans , - and Douglas Kennedy Wednesday, iron Starry Jeff Chandler and Evelyn Keyes Thursday and Friday, March 13 and 14 PfHibg-YilD feaS' tion. liretty soon I came to a cross roads. The slsn post said so many miles to Delway and so many miles to Way Cross. I took the roaa to Way Cross. Much to my surprise again I found I had traveled the road once before, but had started at the other end that time. I came out on the Magnolia-Dehvay high way and decided to go back to Mag nolia., v I went to Rose Hill and traveled the section from Rose Hill to Jerry Teachey's store. Ail of the people I visited were colored, interesting to talk to.. xney were I found out that one woman s nuaoano was nu- ed right In front of their house Just before Chrtetanas. He stepped off a dus wnue rraim uume at Camp JLejeune ana a car n nim. Hattle DODSOn SglO Sne Qlun I nave much Christmas, and I am sure she didn't with such an unhappy thing to rememoer. . . At one IlOUSe the Colored glTl I ta!ked with had a two weeki i oW baby girl. Shewaa tne uniesi uxue pr.unds. The mother said she was little but definitely loud. Everyone was interested in tne Charlie Eoney case which was In ' " r. ...v m - I couldn't r Y, U. hn h,t tel, ftm "ymore than what WM In our paper. One woman amused me. I had one of our Duplin Times and she wanted to read it. I sat for quite some Ume while she read most of the front page. I had always had the impression that most old color ed people couldn't read. I don't know why I thought this, Just some-i thing I had taken for granite I gues. I was amazed to find that so msny of them can read. This woman was in her-fifties or sixties I guess and she read alout to me. I enjoyed hearing her because it taught me a lesson, not to take things for gran ite. At several homes that I visited there was sickness. I think most of them had flu. It seems there is quite an epidemic of flu in our county. At one home I visited they were cooking ham and it smelled so good. Having to be back in the office by five o'clock, I really had to hurry on. I was enjoying my travels so much that the titme slipped up. The wind was beginning to rise a bit and it was also getting much cooler when I started back to the office in Kenansville. 3 CENTER THEATRE Mount Olive, N. C. WEEK OF MARCH 9 Sunday-Monday-Tuesday Ten Tall Men Burt Jody LANCASTER LAWRENCE Wednesday-Thursday Elopement Clifton Ann WEBB FRANCES Friday - Saturday Man In The Saddle - Randolph ? Joan SCOTT LESLIE I i r March 12 unn LL...-i tls ii-iJ. Cendidsfe For Lt. Governor LUTHER H. HODGES Announcement by Luther H. Hod ges, of LeaksviUe (Rockingham county) as a candidate for Lieutenant-Governor brings into the poli tical arena a businessman who is putting Into practice some of the advice he has given in public ad 24 Negro 4-H Club Adult Leaders For A 4-H Leader Training School Twenty-four Negro 4-H Club Adult Leaders met here Wednesday night to attend a 4-H Leader Train ing School. The meeting was open end with a discussion lead by Al ease Massenbcrg, local home agent, on "What 4-H Work Does," A coun ty map was then shown pointing out the location and enrollment of 4-H clubs in the county. The main speaker for the occas sion was Mrs. Idell J. Randall, Asst. Negro State 4-H Specialist. Mrs. Randall spoke on the "Lead ers role In the 4-H Program." A brief buzz session was conduct ed fnlliiutntf thf fldrirp&A at which time the leaders grouped them- selves to form leadership plans for vor rvamvtivA nelffhtmrhoods. The efficiency of the leaders was obvious as a result of their con- structlve thinking during the buzz session. Out of the discussion, the leaders arrived at these points that they wertu going to adopt in their neighborhoods. 1. Hold joint neighborhood meet ings with the 4-H members. WARSAW, 82, B. F. GRADY 58 Boys Game Warsaw 22 30 18 1282 B. F. Grady 21 11 11 1558 Winners high scorers: Bostac la. Houston 23, Grady 13. Defensive leaders: Carlton, Grice. Losers' hifh scorers Lynn Harper 27, Nick Kornegay 15. De fensive leaders: Donn Wells, Leslie Turner, Oscar Sulton. B. F. GRAD1 - . WARSAW 42 -Girls Game Warsaw 11 21 C 442 B. F. Grady 10 21 14 1257 Winners' high scorers: Betty Smith 42. Defensive leaders: Lou Gene Smith, Margaret Jones, Ever- leene Davie. Losers' high scorers: Gone 24, Hipp 17. Defensive leaders: Blan. chard, Sutton. Class A Tourney ATLANTIC 62, BOLIVIA 43 Boys Game Atlantic 21 15 10 1662 Bolivia 6 15 9 13 43 Winners' high scorers: B. Willis 26, Morris 18. Defensive leader: County Basketball wmmimmmmmjjmBmmiimmiig if V LL.tJiiOiLJLiiJUJJMtaniiLMJ DRIVE-IN mum fliwiin I "1 mra LliliJIimi! lull Beulaville, II. C. Duplin's , Newest and WEEK OF MARCH 9 ; Sunday and Monday Happy' Go lovely 1 VERA ELLEN and DAVID NIVENS ' Tuesday and Wednesday . Borneo Be Bad ' ROBERT RYAN ;! JOAN FONTAINE ;, t .'.,4jt Thursday and Friday ii MadWnesday- U HAROLD LLpYD and ARLENE JUDGE ' Saturday Douhle Feature Boss Ofjlfe? Boom Town ROD CAMERON Penlher Island ALlLi;RC3ITC Abu'- Cartoon dresses and private conversations.! Hodges has long urged that men from business and industry use their experience and capabilities in public life and political affairs. ' Hodges worked as an office ooy and mill employee at Leaksville Spray. : After college he resumed his work with the Marshall Field mills later becoming general man ager . He was vice-president of Marshall Field when he retired from the company in April 1950 and accepted an assignment with the Economic Co-operation Admin istration. He served for a year as chief of the industry division of the E.CA. in Germany. Since his retiJ:i he has devoted himself to several business enterprises of which ne is part-owner. Although It is his first time to offer for an elective office, Hodges served under former Governor O, Max Gardner as a member of the State Boad of Vocational Educa tion and under former Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus as a member of the State Highway Commission. He has rendered other public ser vice to the State and nation, in cluding two assignments in Europe for the U. S. Government. Hodges, 53, has lived at Leaks viUe since 1900. He received his A.B. degree at the University of North Carolina In 1919 and was awarded an honorary L.L.D. de gree there In 1946. He is a form er trustee of the University and served as president of the Busi ness Foundation of North Carolina, He is a prominent Rotarian and has represented Rotary in various capa cities throughout the world. 2. Hold joint leader planning meetings. 3. Encourage 4 -Hers to increase 4. Encouraee parents to support the 4-H activities of their child-( ren. 5. Obtain up to date scientific In formation from the county agents to pass on to the 4-Hers. 6. To educate parents and others as to the value of 4-H work and projects. 7. To create and stimulate more interest in project work. 8. To encourage club members to practice thrift. 9. To pass of the talents that they as leaders have, ana to learn 'from each other how te do things. iu. to ioiiow inrougn on prujroi activity. Thenterest and determination of tne leaders to ao a gooa jod was nicely expressed by Mrs. Mioaieton of Kenansville who stated, I wouldn't give up being a 4-M leader for anything." J, Willis.. Losers' high scorers: Beck 1Z, ti. Willets 8. Defensive leader: Rabon. District Two Class A playoffs at Kenansville. Friday's semifinals: 7:00-i Ric"iianl vs.: Jacksonville; 8:30 Atlantis and Newport. RICHLANDS 38, JONES CENTRAL St. Boys Game . Rxhlands 8 6 8 1838 Jones Central 6 13 330 Winners' high scorers: Smith 14, Rhodes 8. Defensive leader: Hum phrey. Losers' high scorers: Sasser 8. Brown 7. Defensive leader: Do hruhL District Two Class A playoffs at Kenansville. LAST WEEK'S GAMES B. F. GRADY 57, WARSAW 42 Girls Game Winners' high scorer: Betty Smith 41. Defensive leaders: Loni Smith, Shirley Herring. Losers' hifh scorer: Anseline Gore 24.- Defensive leaders: Betty Blanchard, Ella West. WARSAW 82, B. F. GRADY 52 Boys Game Warsaw 22 30 18 1282 B. F. Grady 21 11 11 952 Winners' high scorers: Van Bos tic 23, Belton Houston 23, J. T. Grady 15. Defensive leaders: Max iiiuiimaiirpnniMa Si Hi Largejst Drive ln Theatre i hi I I Every Ni-t f) Grlce .and Fisher Carlton. Carlton I had 27 rebounds during game. (Losers' hiah scorers: Bill Har-' per 27, N. Kornegay 13. Defensive leaden: N. Kornegay ana 4. weus. ; CHINQUAPIN 50, MAGNOLIA 49 Bora- Game- ' Magnolia 15 111 15 8 46; Chinquapin 11 12 11 1650 Winners' hieh scorers: Jimmy Halso 18. Willis Sholar 13, Defen sive leaders: R. E. Cottle, Clyde Futrell, Red Sanderson. Losers' hish scorers: Austin Bak er 24, Wlnton Southerland 11. De fensive leaders: Joe Wilson, Biz zell Wilson. CHINQUAPIN 53, MAGNOLIA 42 Girls Game Magnolia 10 6 14 1242 Chinquapin ..v. 13 11 9 2053 Winners' high scorers: Sharon Lanier 32, Nellie Sanderson 11. Lena Futrell 5. Defensive leaders: Nancy N orris, Peggy Judge, Chris tine Sholar. Losers' high scorers: Rosa Batchelor 25, Sue Brown 13. Defen sive leaders: Carolyn Jones, Hilda Brown, Evelyn Parker. SPORTS AFIELD I have at last discovered a true "sportsman's" yacht. It's the ideal answer for salt-water duck shoot ing; if there's no sign of ducks, you can try fishing; if the fishing is lousy too. you go sailing. This dream craft is an old 44-foot auxil iary yawl belonging to Robert Uhl. He writes about her lovingly: My yawl doesn t look like a Ber muda Race winner. She'll never have her picture on the cover of Yachting. But she's. mine and I love her. I discovered her by pure accident in a small boatyard on iLong Island. Her name was Prima Donna and she was a mighty dish eveled lady with her mizzen shrouds starboard bowsprit guy and life lines broken and dangling, and can. i k"""s ut-"-3- She's broad and squat and stub-, by-masted and only the good Lord knows how old she is. But her bot tom is as solid and sound as a Labrador's heart. When I stepped on her deck, I knew that I had to have her. Prima Donna has two real beds (not bunks) in her main cabin. A huge icebox for a boat, a big galley, and a good ''head." The forward cabin sleeps three in oversized berths . She has a big coal-burning stove that's a joy to cook on, and '.hat keeps the cabin warm on the coldest days. For hot weather, there's a good alcohol stove. Her cockpit is big and uncluttered, her decks broad and clear. Eighty horsepower pushes her at a rousing eight knots under power. She cost me $2,800 and I've put $1,300 more into her for new sails, rigging, engine overhaul and assorted gadgets. An automatic fire-exftinguisher system protects the galley and engine room. Ex pensive but I wouldnt dare leave her with a fire going in the stove without it. An automatic pump keeps her bilges dry. Her weatherly qualities are ex cellent. No wind has yet .been able to put her gunwales under. She's quiet and dry wilh an easy action in any kind of sea. That's my saiimg-fishirag-hunting yawl. Thanks to her, I can sneer at fellow hunters, fishermen and yachtsmen alike. At hunters who must rise at 2 a. m. and go through purgatory before they start shoot ing; at spring and fall fishermen who must do likewise, and at sum mertime yachtsmen who must en dure my brags about eff-season ad entures while their own craft are 'shore In a shipyard. This is un questionably one of the greatest pleasures of life to be able to leel so superior. 1 4-D Will Control Weeds In Corn Cocklcbur, morning glory, and other troublesome weeds in corn can be controlled with chemicals, says Glenn C. Klingman, weed con trol scientist With the North Caro lina Experiment Station. CherttiicaJ weed control, says Klingman, is both easy and econ omical. For example, the cost of treating corn with 2, 4-D after it is 10 to 12 inches tall is less than $1 per acre. "The 2, 4-D material," he adds, "will control both cockelibur and morning glory and, If properly used, it won't damage the corn. Klingman explains that when weeds are removed chemically, all the available moisture, soil nutri- Alcfco NO RISK M yoe k eat Wlnhy Waftn wheaever raf ve fee4 flwy. srtbfy tmmm f trt !' end tm m weak yWl a HitWad Me dWfwate la y! walgM. at .be the Hs r" Mtf. Wclflli bafwe itm t drags) lest Mm Ike WJnlty. V mi .aomplatelr Mtfafitd wltK rstolta. -tetam empty packmn. to rourdnidj a6d ha jrjfwHjJ-:; lull parcbaat '. .Gx:;icn6:STBnEl ! YOUR "WALGREEN AGENCY ; 1 , ; In Warsaw . ; .. . ", en's, and UJit are'madu & ..ui to tne corn. In many tne extra yield Of corn on fields treated with 2,4-D is worth more than 10 times tne cost oi we treatment. - - ' -rnere- point in wying gooa seed corn, providing abundant Soil fertility, and doing all the sary work to grow good corn only to have weeds take over the field and reduce your field," says the . Experiment Station scientist. For more complete Information on the use of 2, 4-D in "corn, see your county agent or write Kllng man in care of, the North Carolina Experiment Station, Raleigh, and ask for mimeographed sheet, on "Chemical Weed Control in corn. MRS. M. M. TI1IGPEN BetUfcfUIe, N.'C, Ktrntathe ro WARSAW FLORAL COMPANY ... WARSAW N. C. c Drive-ln Theatre PINK HILL, N. C. Where The Whole Family Goes To See Good Shows Telephone 2341 Sunday, March 9 Lion Hunters with BOMBA Also Cartoon Monday and Tuesday March 10-11 Twin Beds All Star Cast Also Cartoon-Pete Smith Wcdncsday and Thursday March 12-13 A true story that every American should see I Was A Communist For The F.B.I. FRANK LOVEJOY Also Candid Mike-Cartoon Friday and Saturday March 14-15 Double Feature Silver Canyon GENE AUTRY Million Dollar Pursuit Penny EDWARDS Steve FLAGG "Good Pictures Never Die They Just Flay Away" , 3! cTIMjs MotoF fz VI ;
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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March 6, 1952, edition 1
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