Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / June 5, 1952, edition 1 / Page 10
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J, i BY: VOA IHLLOY r The trouble with most of ut Isn't Ignorance what ails u as much as most of us being ante to know so many things that Just isn't sol But one can always throw up both IOOOOOOOOOOOI IN Kinston IT'S Tyndalls FOR Seed 11 i I SOT BEANS COW PEAS CKOTALARIA LATE CORN SUDAN' GRASS GARDEN SEED Plants ' POTATO TOMATO ' CABBAGE mi. I. Ann PEPPER Dusts AND Sprays FOR TOBACCO, COTTON, TRUCK AND GARDEN hand tin despair and say, 'Well, that's what I heara anyway A sincere learner becomes a tec- ret master of his labors which is God's way of educating us I think. Most of us could use a good size cemetery to bury our faults In too. They say, a ntue -Aierr saves a lot of 'Alas.' A stitch in time saves nine but when time flies so fast these days who ha tune to sew? Mr. and Mrs. Jake Watson of Til ton, Ga., was an honored guest at tne Home ox Mr. jonnny Hoi lingsworth and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parker recently. While there they were vuitea by Mr. and Mrs. David Kilpatrlck and children, Miss Cath erine Kilpatrick, Mr. and Mrs. Lu ther Brock and Mrs. Preston Bos- tic and little son, all of near Bose Hill. Mr, and Mrs. Van Murrell of Louisville, Ky., arrived here last week, after an extended study at the Theological Seminary at Lou isville for the past year. Mrs. Mur rell is expected to participate In the Bible School -which is coins on this week at the Baptist church here. They are at borne with their parents Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Grasham and the Van Murrells at Jackson. ville. . Mrs. R. W. Treharne and little son 'Ricky left last Saturday for Pittsburgh, Penn. where she re sides. She was expected to be met in Washington. D.C. bv hep Kit. band's parents while her husband Is away on business in the western part of the states. Mrs. Trebams has been visiting her mother and other relatives here, Mrs. Milloy ; Mrs. A. F. Gatlin, Mrs. V. Mil loy and Mrs Hazel Treharne and childre nail visited down at Sneads Ferry last week and delighted in the surf waters and sightseeing for a day of relaxation. ; Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Sanderson and several other went deep sea fishing last week with gpod results; also making their selves at home while there in their new cottage on the beach. All the ne wfishernien lecame sea-sick uhmmm. --' Little Thomasine Sanderson, small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Sanderson was reported 'lost' one day last week while on a little shopping tour in Wallace. I don't think thee Militia was called out but when sne put on the loud speak ers in her way of bawling to the tops of her lungs It was not long before she was noticed and brought in to safety. Don't know what the was buying. , ; - Mrs. Haze DalL who has cheated death by moments or inches, is re portedly aoing wen ana is expect ed home from a Kinston hospital most any flay now. t Hope and prayer could have had untold mir acles to do with her recovery. Mrs. Mabel Thomas Da 11 return ed home to Norfolk, Va., last week after spending' several days with her mother while In danger of pass ins away. All .are so glad of her Impending home coming along with all her family and friends. The Bible School has been well attended all week and the weath er has been fine. . LOS ANGELES, CALIF. Helpless! Mrs. Agnes Jones, 60. foreground, and her daughter, Martha, 80, in iron lung at General Hospital. The daughter was stricken first with a muscular atrophy (Lou Gehrig s disease) a year ago. Recently the mother joined her in an iron lung, afflicted with the same disease. . , -. - .... . . . .. , ....."',-... Malaria Controllers Expert In Giving The Bugs A Blast At Camp Lejeune 1 My pet peeve of the week Is to We Welcome Our Friends From Duplin County, 1 1 1 JOOOOOOOOOOOt Real Home Made Cakes-Pies Pastries Donuts Jimmle Jingle Says: Fresh from the oven, Tasty, swell That is the tale Our baked goods tell. Glazed, Chocolate, Jelly, and Cream Good variety of breakfast buns fresh dally. SPECIAL ORDERS FOR WEDDING, BIRTHDAY AND PARTY CAKES ... 5 KINSTON, N. C. , 1 3 I TO THE PEOPLE OF DUPLIN COUNTY: I wish to express my sincere gratitude for the vote given me in the Democratic Primary last Saturday for the office of Register of Deeds of Duplin County. I know that it is going to be a real challenge to maintain the office on the same high level as it has been operated in the past. I have pledged to keep the' present efficient force and pledge to give my best to the task. I trust that Duplin County can continue to point with pride to the office of Register of Deeds and that it will con tinue to serve the best interest of all our people. - It was a pleasure to be in a fine, clean race for this office and I trust that this campaign will long be remembered as one of the cleanest ever conducted for a county office. The only really hard part of the race for me has been, my sincere respect and admiration for the two fine gentlemen in the race. I am a firm believer that The Master does not record who wins or looses a racebut rather HOW WE PLAY THE GAME! - I congratulate Mr. McKay and his staff of election officials on the fine manner in which they discharged their duties Saturday ,1 visited 18 of the polling places while voting was in progress, and, at every place I Was much impressed. 6:30 p.m. came before I got around to the other two places. I really feel, that Duplin County can well be proud of Saturday's Primary. p. ...i.Vffc May God add his blessings to the decisions we made and may not a single citizen' ever, have cause to regret the outcome of any of the races. This is my earnest prayer. " ' - Camp Lejeune. Operations ag ainst insect invasion of Camp Le jeune continue at a stepped up pace wiggiers warm-up t osummer Suns.' J: ;,'.; . t,-i. ' -l i.f .v, Holding the line In the battle for freedom from disease-bearing pests in tne camp s Malaria control unit. Under Commander F. K. Harder. 3 officers, S enlisted men. 1 ec retary and 34 laborers take the field against insects dally. Breed ing grounds of mosquitoes, in swamps, puddles, and stagnant pools are sought out by survey par ties. Shock troops in the form of work parties are then ' dispatched to the larger points. Armed with knapsack spraying tanks, aero-mist sprayers and oiled sawdust bags they destroy the larva before it de velops. Fuel oil Is spread on the water, the area is sprayed and the oiled sawdust bags are deposited in the water. This triple attack des troys and discourages breeding bugs. For full-grown Insect pests, the units' ful fog machine is a whole sale killer. A mixture of fuel oil and DDT is sprayed from the fog machine on, the back of a truck. Under heat and pressure, massive clouds of Insect - killing fog are spread over awlde area. Two fog machine equipped trucks operate nights a week in camp weather permitting. Research and classification of In sects for Malaria Control is by Lt. jg) Ted Tibbetts, base En- .uniouigisx. in nu laboratory Lt Tibbetts ' collects and identifies most of the Insect types to be found in the area. ;.,-... Approximately 6 light traps for Insects operate from 1800 to 0600 every night. A light attracts the pugs, a fan then sucks them down into a Jar containing cynanide. During winter months a program ox construction, overhaul and re pairing of machinery i scarried out by Malaria Control ' Clearing and maintenance of ditches is perform ed to insure proper . drainage in warm weather. ; ' 1 Constant activity.' observation and annihilation of insectspests, by Malaria Control makes Camp Le jeune a safer and better place in which to live, v ; , meet an acquaintance on the street and start talking to them to find out later that I was talking to the wrong person about things which do not concern the person I thought I was talking to in the first place, or the high cost of living. The way things sometimes turn out we were all better off when prosper ity was reportedly just around the corner. Church services were conducted Sunday night at the regularly quar terly meeting by the Rev. N. E. Greshana with a very large atten dance. Sunday School was rated a good attendance also Sunday Vright Brothers Memorial -Museum Raleigh, N. C. A $1,000,000 Wright Brothers Memorial Museum is going to be erected at the birth place of aviation near Kill Devil Hill on - North Carolina's Outer Banki. - Sponsors are- aiming at completion of the project by De cember 17, 1953, the 50th anni versary of the historic first flight by Wilbur and orvuie wrignt. The museum will bouse scale models of gliders and other air craft built by the Wrights, and the workshop and hangar they used will be reconstructed. Plans also call for a landing field for light planes. J -. Plans for the project were draft ed here at the organizational meet ing of the Wright Memorial Com mittee of the Kill DevU Hills Mem orial Society with the honorary chairman, Gov. W. Kerr Scott. Brig. Gen. Frank P. Lehr of Mansfield, Ohio, is president of the society, and Miles Clark of Elizabeth City, N. C, is chairman of the board. Governor Scott appointed a com mittee headed by David Stick of Kill Devil Hills to make arrange ments for financing the museum. Funds would be raised by the avia tion industry and from private con tributors, with the National Park Service cooperating in the ' con struction .and maintenance of the building. . Committee ' members Include Adm. Dewitt C. Ramsey, president of Aircraft Industries Association, Washington, D. C, Paul Edward Garter, curator of the National Air Museum, - Washington; , Merrill C. Meigs, vice . president of Hearst Corp.. Chicago: T. H. Davis, presi dent of Piedmont Airlines, Winston Salem, N. C; Fred C. Kelly of Ken sington, Md., official biographer o fthe Wright brothers; Ronald F. Lee, assistant director of the Na tional Park' Service, Washington; ftOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOi o u o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o r" 4 PLY 5 LB. BAG PER THOUSAND HARDWARE DEPT. FREE PARKING REAR OF STORE MS- 4$'. 1 I KINSTON, N. C 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 o o o o o o o o Ralph Whitener, organizational dP rector of the Air Force Association, Washington; Dr. C. C. Crittenden, director of the North Carolina De partment of Archives and History, Raleigh; and D. Victor Meekins of Manteo, N. C. Marriage license Issued In May The Register of Deeds office reports the following marriage 11 cense . issued during the month Of 'May..?.- ; . .... WHITJfr Preacely Quinn, Opal Sholar, Duplin- County: 1 James Henry Ives, Agnes Irene Dail, Du- pun uounty; itaymona stone, Fran klin County and Rachel Darden Hall, New Hanover County; Volney Bryan, Joanne Barbee, Onslow county; Tracy Carroll Lanier, Bet ty Thomas Cottle, Pender County; Julian Henry Hunter, Lula Dunn banaun, Duplin County; J. D. Brown, Coleen Brown, Duplin county; David Chestnutt, Evelyn Earle Blackburn, Duplin County; William D. Jones, Helen Smith, Du plin County; Gilbert Powell Taylor. Robersonville, N. C, Carolyn Jean Whaley. Duplin County. .COLORED: Johnnie Grantham. V .C ::!::32 Two year praUcllon. Cm ' paranli, riiildraa imdtr ia. Pay wpantM H $5,000 och : pne. Ifood pn.fll low toil, ramlly $10, Isdivldual $5.;, tuu Mas ir phomi JACK SITTERSON Phone 239-6 - Kenansvile, N.' C. FARM BUREAU MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CO. homi ornci cotuMiin, ohi A. J. Cavenaugh , Jeweler DIAMONDS ' WATCHES Watch Jewelry REPAIRING ENGRAVING k.. 1 . . - Funeral 1 ecs I -Imore Ambuianoe Service Day or Ntalil ,. aXeeenUttv .Va , WARSAW FtORAi; : MRS. M. M. THIGPEN ! BeaikvOle, K. CV , ; ; company WARSAW n'ci'fcj-oji 'DAIUTY MAID' BREAD ; ENRICHED AT YOUR GROCER FOR SALE ' I 150 BUSHELS OF NATIVE T; GROWN MIXED FIELD PEAS.. ;gUl !'','v"v" ''"'SEE"''" 1 iiH'M M. L. LANIER CHINQUAPIN N. C. ff 3 1-2 Mfles Southeast of Chinquapin On Maple Hill Road IOOOOCOOOOCCCOOOOOOOOOCOO Deed or Disd!:J Sf:ck Reeved - ' Absolutely Free Of Charge - Mules, ySKJtcjs - Phone Collect, Gc'.' !icro 1532 or 2333 ' ;ll. C: COMSOLID TED HIDE Co., Lc l o o o o ) 0 WALLACE, N. C. . ! True-Tesf Linoleum Rugs 9x12 Special Price $5.98 trosley & Coolerafor Refrigerators & Home roavArr " Crosley & Coolerafor "Electric Ranges & Hot Water Heaters Caloric & Dixie Gas Ranges, Hot Water Heaters, & Johnson's Fast Flame Bottle Gas Special Price On 9 pc Living Room Suits ' T 4 Special Price On All Mahogany Bedroom & Din ing Room Suits Insecticides: Paris Green1, Arsenic of Lead, Rotonone And Cotton Place Your Orders Hoy For Buckeye Oil Curers & Whiting Coal Sfolcers ' : Horse & Tractor Dmn Sprayers & Dusters" Unusual Savings On All Lawn Furniture MR. FARMER: Why use only Nitrogen for your top dresser. Get both Potash & Nitrogen for the best results. Use Johnsons 14-0-14 cash top dresser for better yields of cotton corn, grain, pastures, etc. . ' ' Use Johnson's 8-0-24 Wonder Ripener -for tobacco. It is formulated to give your tobacco just the right amount of extra push to make it produce better quality & more pounds. V Sell Yo Prci'jcc i Li 7dl:cc & M:!ie Jchjion Cotton Co. Your ;Stc;?in3 ll::rfrs ? ; Cash If You Have H-rCrcdit If You Heed If Visit Lake Tut, Rose Hill, II. C. Dzncinj 13 Listen Fcr A.-;:.::.-::cr.::nt Of Gr::J Q-frj Seen. Lc!:o'Tcf Vill h lb t :::':rn Rcc- I it I re:l;:n Ccr.!:r h Ecifcrn II; C. c ( Your --7 r- Eest IIziLci Fcr Lirs esi C01C v . 0 Ha Cs
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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June 5, 1952, edition 1
10
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