Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / May 8, 1952, edition 1 / Page 4
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
1 ft :r.7.. h'-ii hzdoOi Hi equates Llay Further Their Education " Br T-Srt H. Jack Ottaway, to , USAF Kecroittns urncer iot Dunlin County Any man that doesn't hive an ed ucation it a FOOL. Most any suc cessful business man can tell you this without 1 even smiling. . You young men and women, too, that will step out Into the big world with a high school diploma in your : hand and say Here I am, what have ' you to offer me?) In this world and times it is not what do you have to offer me, It is what do I have to offer you. At this time 1 you as a nigh school graduate do not have too much to offer any one or any business. You have the book learning and maybe some of you will have the experience to go long with the book learning, but : not all of you. I have heard the - song so many times, In the service and since I have been on recruit ing. I wish I had more schooling. Well let me tell you right now. It : wont come to you or anyone un less you yourself apply yourself 10 ine learning that is put in front of you In the public school today. Host of you have found that out by now. You have completed 12 hard years In schooling and now want to get out and burn the world up. nut ta do this yob wfllJiave to start at the bottom Just as yod did when you started In the first grade at school. Now, a lot of you will say Why do I have to start at the bot tom and learn all over again? Let me put it this way, start at the bot tom of the ladder and climb, and the only way you are going to climb that ladder, la to study. By study I mean not to sit down and take a book and study It the way vou would in ' high school but study what you plan to make of yourselves, mere are oniy two kinds of people today, one is a fail ure and the other Is a success. Which one will you be? To be a success in life Vou are going to have to put your best foot forward. Now that you have the high school diploma, why not put it to use In one of the follow ing ways; enter college next fall or this summer if possible,, attend a trade school and learn a trade go to a business of your choice. and start in as an apprentice and learn a trade, or enlist in a branch of ser vice of your choice. Maybe some of you already have a job to go to, but I am writing this for the men and women who are not as lucky as some, and want to get ahead. It r ' j J t MOTHER'S DAY MAY lllh You'll Find Hundreds Of Items Here Thursday - Friday - Saturday Prices $5.97 NATIONALLY ADVERTISED" DRESSES SPRING and SUMMED Sizes 7 to 15 10 to 20 3S to 50 In Cottons, Chambray, Silks. Shantungs, Whites, and Sheers, Up To $19.97 is a weu Known raci tnai no one can get ahead unless he or she will try to learn a little more than they know now. In the service a man or woman won't get the pro motions or better Jobs unless they apply themselves. Ana tne oest way to apply yourself Is to study and eet all the education you can. In the U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force a person can make and study any subject he or she wishes and the service will help vou attain the goal you set for yourself. By this means I will bring this out this way; first off the Army has a plan in effect now that will enable a high school graduate to apply for an Army school now (before he enlists In the Army) d be accep ted then enlist In the. Army, finish his basic training and then attend the technical training school" of his cholee . I have a list at my of fice if any of you are Interested. Now if you wish to enlist in the U. S. Air Force there are schools which you can attend also but I can not apply for a school before you enlist After you enlist In the service you can take any course you wish through the United States Armed Forces Institute, for the in itial price of $2.00: There are soma. 500 courses available to men ana women in the services. Any man with a high school education can apply for a commission in the U.S. Army before enlisting and can be assured of getting into the Officers Candidate School if qualified otherwise. So as I said before any man that doesn't have an education is a Fool. You and I know what it would mean if there were Not any school of learning available to us today. We could be setting ducks for the people behind the so called Iron Curtain. To keep our schools open for the coming generations we have to keep our strength in the U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force up and above the strength that it is today. Why not help out by enlisting in the U. S. Army or the U. S. Air Force today and keep up your education In the service. But by all means keep your mind alert by studying, we all study even as we read this paper. $2.27 TO $4.97 SHOP AT In Wilmington Lots Of Parking Space 118 Market Street IN WILMINGTON Mrs. Lottie Berger and Miss Ra chel Outlaw will be hostesses to the AUW at their home Saturday af ternoon. All members are urged to be present . - By Wllbert 8. Boney i This -is the question every adult should be able to answer In the affirmative. ! Human beings were not given the power by God to see into the future so all we can do Is try to be as well prepared as pos sible for whatever may come. Not only on the battle field is the need for a blood transitu ion sometimes very urgent and necessary to save a life or prolong one as the case may be. This rambling beginning is leading up. to the story of a project of tbi Warsaw Junior Chamber of Commerce of which we are very proud and1 which has been of great benefit to many peo ple since iff beginning Jan. min. 1951. Actually this project ovgaa to take shape on Thursday nigni in Dec. of 1950 at a regular meeting of the Warsaw Jaycees as Sam God win who was then Jaycee Presi dent, asked' if anyone had any new projects for the Club to dis cuss. Dr. C. S. Matthews then mentioned reading in some paper about a town or community wnicn had the blood type of most of it's citizens recorded so, that anyone who needed blood In' an emergen cy could refer, to the list to find someone without delay who could give the type of blood they needed. This idea of Dr. Matthews for a Club project met with Immediate interest and approval by the Club members and there followed a num ber of suggestions as to now uus project could and should be carried out. Pres. Sam Godwin then ap pointed a committee of Dr. Mat thews, who was to see that the nec essary serum supply was obtain ed. B1U Boyette and H. C. Allen who were to do the necessary head scratching or detail planning to get the oroiect underway. These young men did a splendid job of getting together the necessary materials. personel and plans along with oro mises of cooperation to get the project started. The planned way of operation Included a trained nurse to be at the City Han eacn Thursday as examinations for driv ing licenses were and still are given and to try to get each per son to have his or her blood type taken and put on their drivers lic ense as well as to be recorded for a permanent record at the City Hall which would be available at all times to the public for use. At the next Jaycee meeting the Blood Typing Project Committee explain ed the details of the plans they s7 'uy had 'made and reported that - the pro ect was ready for . execution and would be started the following Thursday morning of Jan. 18th at 9:00 a.m. This Jaycee project was officially started-with Mrs. E. B. Laschley as nurse on duty with Mrs. Eva Lewis who Is a nurse also as welt as the entire Jaycee com mittee on hand to give the project a good beginning. . Mrs. , Lewis who helped the Jaycee committee in many ways to get started on this project, continued to assist Mrs. Lashley for the next three weeks In the job of blood typing. These fine ladies deserve much praise for the fine job they did in bringing this project from a very slow begin ning to the point where it was and is now an expense paying project for Itself when you consider also that as qualified nurses they agreed with the Jaycees to work on this project very' cheaply. ; They agreed upon fee from each person whose blood type Is taken is (25c) twenty five cents and the nurse receives $6.00 per day with the Jaycee Club agreed to pay the nurse on duty the balance when she does not take in ($6.00) six dollars. The Jaycee Club also has to furnish the necessary serum which had cost about ($50) fifty dollars up through the 17th of April and the Supple mentary fee to the nurses had cost the Club about ($70) seventy dol lars. Recently the Jaycee Club paid ($29.72) twenty five dollars and seventy two cents to get the lists typed up so they could be furnished to each doctor's office in Warsaw and also to the Hospital in Clinton . so this project has only cost the Jaycee Club approximately (150) one hundred and fifty dollars for sixteen months of operation. A very small cost for so worthy a pro ject is the opinion of the Warsaw Jaycees. ' People come here from far and hear to get their driver's license so there are names on these lists from all over North Carolina but of course those from right here in Duplin County are the ones that will be used mostly. The Jay cee Club highly appreciates the co in Lj A.' Ford's huge, pne-piece curved windshield and picture windows all J. around give you Full-Circle Visibil ity. It's just one of the many fine car features like Ford's new bodies (the most advanced in the industry) . . . Ford's new high-compression in the 110-h.p. V-8 and 101-h.p. Six . . . and your choice of Fordomatic, Overdrive or Conventional Drive. Fordomatic, Ovwdrhra, wM Jd.woU Htm optional of extra oort. Squlpnonf, accMsoriM and trim wboct ..to ilKinyv wilhovt nut lev - FD.A.F. operation of the 1 Warsaw Town Clerk, , Mrs. Glenn Rollins and Chief of Police Mr. Earl Coombs for on them has fallen the task of looking up names of people wno have the certain blood type which at times someone has urgently needed. !. 4ven during her lunch hour she baa been called on says Mrs. Rollins and even at 12:00 p.m. says Chief Coombs and this because only at the Town Hall has this list been kept recently. The lists were typed up for all doctor's offices In Warsaw and the Clinton Hospital a few days ago so should be more easily avaible to the public and local Doctors by this time. This story- could not be finished without assuring the State Driver's Licenses Examiners who - have worked in Warsaw that the War- saw Jaycees realize fully how val uable their cooperation has been on this project and appreciate most highly their help .. Under the State Law a person does not nave to nave their blood type on their driver's license, even though it Is the opin ion of the Warsaw Jaycees that this should be a law, but these gentle men have helped this project great ly by pointing out to drivers license applicants just bow valuable it might be to them sometimes In an accident to have their blood type so printed on their license. Every adult person in this community should have their blood type re corded whether they have driver's license or not because as pointed out at the beginning of this story we dont know the future so your name and blood type on these lists might save a friends life sometimes or even your very own. You may have- your blood type taken and recorded any Thursday from 9:00 a.m. until B:0 pjn. at the Warsaw Town Hall and the twenty five cents fee will seem very small if a friend's or your life is saved someday. The eighth grade of E-i anoii Jun ior .High School held it's gradua tion exercises at Salem Church, Friday, May 2, at 8 pjn.- The speaker for the occasion was Miss Annie Mae Kenion, Supervisor of Duplin County Negro Schoola who addressed the large audience on the subject: .'Beware what, you set your heart on for it shall sure ly be yours." v;-:-',;y V"".;" '. 'J She cautioned the gathering that they must have faith in God, that they, must be honest, that they must encourage thriftiness, that they must cooperate. " ; Music for the evening was fur nished by the school's glee club under the direction of Mrs. F. Everette Brlnson and Mrs. R. O. Whitehead. Mr. E. H Ware, Prin cipal, spoke on the progress and growth of the school and thanked the Duplin County Board of Edu cation, Miss A M. Kenion, and all the patrons of the school for their fine cooperation, -.--s- ' - Certificates were awarded by Mr. Henry Martin of Warsaw to the following graduates: Mary E. Ber ry, l ieu iier Eiieil, Ja -per asumJ, Emma Branch, Christine Branch, -Johnnie W. Branch, Tommle Branch Epgene Bryant, Helen M. Davis, Elijah Etheridge, Mardica Ever ettee, Clifton ' Garner, Von ZetU , Hall, James t .Hamilton, Charles E. Jenkins, Eloise Korngeay, Her man Lawson, Johnnie Lofton, Flo- , rine Miller, Ezzell Mclver, Maeola Nobles, Margaret Outlaw, Mary Outlaw, Rosa Russell, Robert Stan ley, Mary White, Nannie Murphy, Cennie Smith, Jr., and Robert Kor negay. ; a-; , : s ; : . j 'v: ; fun rot xov - Write for illus trated booklet ' Dept I Cham ber of Com merce " Little Miss Mary Ann, young dauehter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stroud is a patient In Parrott's hos pital in Kinston. YEHOM ri k2 Pick a White cord plaid wrinU-shed tissue gingham in a young fashion favorite. Jutting hip pockets on graceful skirt... rhine stone studded buttons on collar and front closing. Sizes 14H to 22H. - Ton never heard of "Yenom". It is Money spelled backwards, to draw your attention to the fact that you should be a depositor In this ... bank whew every safeguard la given and every service rendered, consistent with good banking. Bank Of lit Olive "Make Our Bank Your Bank" Mount Olive Calypso mm ft ! il f;. . tibtr Pg Palmtr Drtuts from t& i. OF DRESS f0 0'1 at , , exclusively Carolynn Shop Of Wilmington, Inc. Market Street Shopping Center ' 16th Market 0 SEND OR MAIL 111 YOUR SUDSCPJPMITO Sr W. H-' . 'Mi sv r r 'A. if . il: U'w. .1 1, 3 v v-.f-.f ' U - iTr. U ..-i-.t ii.,t..t. it V m s it
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 8, 1952, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75