Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Sept. 11, 1952, edition 1 / Page 12
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r t .'it' t ' t 1 ' UUiIIH 'Jill rc&Jtei tuk TWnfil fa DuMtGte, W. C, Ceeety teat ef Ssllterlaj, kMfaMM efflee aa4 printing Keswssriae. It. C. 3. ROBERT GRADY. KOTOS V-fXTt'j,'.'.--.Entered At The res OttW, KeeansvUe. N. C . TKLtraOXK Kminwrffla, Day tSM Night MM .-. SUBSCRIPTION RATBSt 1iM per JW DwpUn. Leaetr, Jmn, Onslow, Pender, Suapm, New Hanerer end Whm ; couUMi $! per yew eatalde this area fat North Carolina; ad $5.M per yes elswhere. ' ,vl "t ..-II III I 'f .M M'lStijfe . ' , '-" T -'- AshressJstag tates fsnwtthei em reqaest, ,.-1 ' I ; ' , ' A btnttsi Ceenty JearaaL deveted to the religions Material. NATION A L Mu$fering-Ou!-Pay ' " Br Erria E. Rhrenbark '. DeplU County Service Officer Court House, Kenansrille -, The new Korean GH BUI provides mustering out pay for veterans ' wifi service ainee June 27, 1950. This program la similar to the World War II mustering out plan In that it pays 9300.00 for those with at least 60 days of service who were on active duty .outside ' the continental limits of the Unit ed States or Alaska; $200.00 for ,- those with 60 days or more of ser vice who were not outside -the "United State or Alaska, and $100 for those who spent less than 60 days active duty. These payments will be made to anyone with an .honorable discharge who served in the rank of Captain or less In the Army, Air Force, or Marine Corps, or as Lieutenant Senior , tirade or less In the Navy. . To apply, applicants should com plete a locally produced form giv ing the branch of service, fun name, serial No., whether you ser ved ouUide the continental United States, your complete mailing ad- OIV52 NoHoaol WiklIHe Ring-necked Fkeenont v . There was a time-many years ago, when Ring-Necked Pheasants were found only in China. From there they spread to Europe, Amer ica, and other parts of the world. Wherever they live today, the col orful birds are eagerly sought each season by hunters. . v To keep the supply -plaatlful in our country, state game depart ments raise and free large numbers of Pheasants every year. - Though hatched and held in captivity part of their lives, the birds are wild when turned loose. They show no i Which:; side of the fence? . i 'i C'' V ii-l'' ' t ' " .' ' t'rn ' i Won't someone tell Mrs. Gloom i , . what her neighbor is doing in her , backyard? Won't someone whisper - -: . about .our low Tales and reliable . ' ' -service? Who'll help her banish-' - . wash day smog on her side of the I : 'i ience? v ' V'V ''.''.'''-..' t. Bug & Uphobtery. Geanin? , , "OUR TRUCKS TRAVEL ALL OVER .DUPLET V!LMTNG!tON,N;C. ; i and arfcaltura development at Deelia II 9 1 TO K U t dress, and sign your full name. (This form is available at the of fice of your county-service offi cer.) : You should enclose the or iginal only of your REPORT OP SEPARATION, DD Form 214, whfch was given to you at time of discharge, and mail to one of the addresses listed below: Army. ;. jl Finance Center, U. S. Army St. Louis 20,-Missouri Att: MOP Branch Air Force: " Air Force Finance Center Denver, Colorado - Coast GUardr Coast Guard Headquarters Washlngtoo 29, D. C, Navy: Field Branch v Bureau of Supplies & Accounts Cleveland 14, Ohio Marine Corps: Commandant of the Marine Corps (CDD)!' ' Washington 29, D. C. 1 To those who desire, if . th ey will bring their Form 214 and con tact their county service officer, he will assist with all the necessary arrangements concerning this ap plication. ini of havinr liven in pens. When on choir own, pheasants dominate the territory in which they roam. With a fighting spirit, they crowd out other birds. The male Pheasant is the battler of the family, and he often engages in combat with another male or with a barnyard rooster. , The male also sports some of the gayest feathers in the world of birds. - Around his eye cnere is a bright spot of red. His head and neck are dark greenish-purple. Below that ha wears a white collar. The rest of his body is s mixture of brilliant colors red, bronze, green, brown, yellow and bluish-black. , By comparison the female Phea sant is dull ana plain a mixture of brown and chestnut, speckled with black..- While this makes her less attractive, the National Wild life Federation -points out that she can hide in the grass more easily than her mate. ' ' : This IS especially important in the spring, when she is sitting on her neat. It is built on the ground, among some weeds, and contains 1 in i M ... M r Ml r 1 ESS:iK2J Cover lSbsequtnc , JSProSrer etomm-v lSRamanlaneitv TAateridt S IS Roman rob It Dreadful . 1 Nothing . Finish 10 Revise SOHSltSS SI USouader 32 Beverage 33 Half ansa "PJ , 34PrnosiUoa "Depart ; u " Mm SOtMB WaSDS MPrrrf-BTrt 21 He deals with Z8 HsDDea aoaln WIc 30 Highways . . 33 Vase S3 Betas to 34 Carried 33 Blackbird 33 Either - i 43 Street (ah.) 41 We 42 Sunt god - 43 Single 49 Disgraces 30 Circle part 81 Appendage - 53 Again 54 Century plant 35 String 8T Performs 39-Uncanny 50 Cats sway VEamCAL " tWBd . 2 Russian river ' I H H H r I ty-fr t H i,f r "T" " r t t t .r r-T"p"" r-T1 TTfn 'r-f 5f T A" t T from six to twelve large, olive-buff eggs. After she keeps them warm for 23 days, they hatch.- . The female takes care oi tne young until fall. Then they lose their first feathers and begin to resemble their parents.' When ful ly grown, the males are from 33 to 38 inches in length. They weigh up to 4 1-2 pounds. Both birds have long slender tails, and the male wears strong spurs on his legs. As the weather turns cold. Ring- Necked Pheasants do not journey southward, but stay right where they are. Most of them live the year round in the northeastern fourth of the united states irom High School Students Creating Wildlife Cartoon Character WASHINGTON. D. C The Na tional Wildlife Federation has ask ed the high school students of America to create a cartoon charac ter which can be used to tell the story of conservation and offered prises totaling $700 in a nationwide contest. - -. The cartoon contest will take the place of the annual conservation poster contest which the Federa tion has, sponsored tor la years. Entries must be submitted by next Jan. 31 and winners will be an nounced during National Wildlife Week In March, 1933. , . - ' - As in the previous poster con tests, the eartoon competition will be divided Into Junior-high groups. Students anywhere in the United States, from the seventh grade through the last year in high school, are eligible. T - , ; First prize In the Junior divis ion grades 7, 8, and 9 is $100. The second best entry .will win 350; third, $29; the next ten best, $10 each. .,-.' Top winner in the Senior division grades 10, 11 and 12 will get $250. ' Second prize is $50; third $25; next ten, $10 each. 1 The Federation said the contest was inspired by the success of In...:. VlKll'l IE Kc V 8ave yourself work and dirt A infttic oil heat! . Efficient C . 'III! S Furnace's improvements ' move the heat right down ".;"rJto .h-.fteor,(i'flo'fuel or ashes to carry cleaner housc-Htipre comfort these 'are vital blessings. And i ' " 'J Coleman 'will, give them to you at an pmazing I9W, . cost, ..See us and let usf prove it ''' . - 'V'r. x i )J r , j . ) , , J ASK "ABOUT. OUR LOW r,!CES Afw CON VENSENT TfSMSl- 30,000 B.T.XJ; " fnnv. Vb r Any MWateUT' agl-jr-wl,'' Sltioiduqr S4Foot3r SSDrcorated'' 71.utakes MFsstetia dtSlmpto 43-PitdMr , BO To the 1 sheltered sCW SSGibbesi 34 Augment ; M Nickel (symbol) ' 44 Ireland 46 Incline (geol) S3 NegaUve reply Maine to tne Dakotas and south to Kansas and Pennsylvania. Their favorite haunts, in this re gion, are the farmlands where corn and other grains grow. About two thirds of their food consists of grain and plsnt life. To round out their meals they eat great quanti ties of insects. ? it Si Desphe tteir' appetite for-grain". Pheasants are not a serious menace to farmers. According to the Na tional Wildlife Federation, hunters keep the number of birds down within limts which are controlled by game and conservation author!- Offered Prizes For Smoky Bear.' the cartoon character developed by the U. S. Forest Service in its advertising campaign to prevent forest fires. The wild- $fe oftlganlzatton hdjxes to find s similar cartoon symbol which can be used to urge Americans to take care of tbei rnatural resources. ; The Federation had these sug gestions for young artistt. j r Entries may be a caricature of an animal or person, or the personi fication of an animal in the man ner of a Disney character., It cau tioned, however, against ,copying the style of another artist. In or der to win sn entry must be orig inl ln.design, t -! ; Agricultural workers from 20 countries spent a week in North Carolina 'during : the Southern Grasslands Tour, held in connec tion with the Sixth International Grassland Congress. ..,,, ' Farmers this yesr are falsing a record crop of a". most SO million turkeys 13 per cent more than last year. ' .IIIK !i:am r.UTc::iTiC! ClETJl! : .1 ' i Bvb tor-Cd 61 , Ko Fin Ts Teal Ko JU&s To fr.n n A f have depenuubk, t .to- low - cost Coleman Oil lloor ' lOutputizss ipnt Tprrrt'e - - ,- i 't 1. r Test Your Score 10 points yfor each correct answer in the' first six questions.' 1. ; The Chinese-Russian Communis! ; leaders met recently in-.which ' ' Russian city: " " " -t - ' 1 Minsk , ' Moscow Leningrad ' Archangel . 2. Which of the following words does not belong in this group: red heliotrope ' mauve decade 3. In which city were the famous colonial-American witch trials held? Baltimore Wheeling Salem Lynchburg --, 4... Which of the following governments cannot claim American cltl- , senship for Its people: " " ' " ' Alaskan Puerto Bican Philippine , ;t v Virgin Islands " ' t " . ' H 3. Pick out the Confaelentietittslsder 'General Grant Ci . , . . P. T. O. Beauregard w James Longstresi : Robert B. Lee ' Stonewall Jackson , .- Canada's "Island Province" is: Baffin Island Prince Edward Island 1, . , , . . Vancouver Island Peelee bland 7. Match the following literary characters with the novels kuwhlch - they appear. Score yourself 10 points for each correct ehokt,. (A) Jean Valjean Tom Sawyer . t . . . B) Ebeneter Scrooge . " LVs Miserable -' - (C) Eva Sinclair -) Dickens' Christmas Caret 1 (D) Aunt Polly ' ' ' Uncle Tom's Cabin ' Total your points. A score of 0-20 Is poor; JO-60, average; TM0. superior; 90-100, very superior. , . . ' " - -Vvi": Answers On Theatre 'Page - 7cll:ce Man Is Chairman Morehecd Scholarship Program At University II. C. C Louis Shields of Wallace, has been appointed chairman for Du-' olln county of the John Motley Morehead Foundation program for awarding scholarships to the Uni versity of North Carolina to grad uates of high schools end prepar atory, schools. j,s . , , i t , ,( Mr. Shields was presented his commission , at a recent meeting of the .county chairmen : in Chapel Morehead scholarships hereto fore have been available only to graduate students. V TheunderBriduate. scholarships will be valued at $1,250 a year for one year, but will be subject to renewsl. These will be available for the fall term of 1953, but appli cation must be in the hands of the county committee by November 13. The scholarships will be awarded next -February 15. .....:.vTy.. -o Applications 'Win be considered first by the county committee and then by the district committees and the central committee at Chapel Hill for recommendation to the Foundation's trustees. The scholarship fund of the Morehead Foundation is vslued at approximately $3,000,000. " - , Speaking of qualifications to be met by scholarship applicants. Chancellor Robert B. House of the University at Chapel Hill said. 'We are asked to look for three qual ities, two facts, and one promise. Enow how to locate Kim? t 1 He might be iFutnl a Locksmith, a jeweicr, an, , Optometrist, a Real Estate Man. -Whatever bis trade V whatever product or service he offers .' . . you can locate it quickly and ; easily in the ; 1 . ,'V X YeYiOV PACES' . of your" Telephone Pire i tery , t',JFind whatever you want .when-j ever you want it! Turn first to the "YELLOW PAGES' to find , u ; r-.'vi, .,- ' , ' .. ,,wh6 buys sells.. InfcIIic - nco Thi three qualities are Intel- Hgence, character, -'imagination. The two facts are achievement and physical health and vigor. The promise is that of future distinct ion in patient lodgement, imagina tive originality, and sound reason ing,' Chancellor House said. ,1 'Mr. Morehead i has posed our problem for us,'" he declared. He has emphasized repeatedly that a boy slmoly the best in his school. Mils county, -his district, in Worth Carotins may not be gooa enougn because that sort of best is rela tive. He has emphasized the ab solute standard, measured by truth, goodness and beauty achievement measured by mastery ana perfec tion. v.vi'iJri'i-.,,.-V' jJ ' .(President Gordon Grey of the consolidated University said the University has never faced a great er challenge to help deserving young men who show promise of future distinction.'. - The Morehead scholarship fund was established by John Motley Morehead of New York, disting uished University alumnus of the class of 1891, who in 1940 created the Morehead Foundation, which has also given the University the $3,000,000 Morehead Building end Planetarium. A native of Spray and member of a distinguished line of pioneers and builders in the ad vancement of this State, Mr. More head has achieved an international reputation as Industrialist, chemist, and engineer. He is a former Min ister to Sweden, j. NOTICE OF RE SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of an order of resale of the Superior Court of Duplin County, made in that Special Proceeding entitled: 'Sarah Williams, et als vs Sadie PhiUyaw Carlton, et Sis', and being Special Proceeding No. 2548, the undersigned :: Commissioners will offer for re sa'.e on Saturday, Sep tember zo, at tne nour 01 12:00 at the Courthouse Door in -Kenans-vllle, North Carolina, to the high est bidder for cash a certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in Warsaw Township, Duplin Coun ty, State of North Caaolina, and being described as follows: ' BEGINNING at a point indicated by a stake in the center1 of the road leading from Warsaw through the lands of W. R. Bla&more and others and known as the Blackmone road and runs with the center of ..I J A .XT-l. 1 O J 1 I"111 lv,au iwiui ucjsf ees ana west 835 feet; thence North 40 degrees East 770 feet to the old line; thence with -the old line South 36 degrees 35 minutes East 2014 feet to a stake; , thence South 77 degrees 40 minutes West 865 feet to the enter of the Blackmore road, the beginning,' containing ,21 1-5 acres, .more or lessv. .-vThe same being Lot No. e in Bloci-i . situated in --i-oniilat of proper-' ty formerly owned by Thos. B. Pierce and known as T. B. Pierce lands as surveyed and nlaf ed bv F, P. Fonville, C. E. which said ?lat or map is recorded in Book 80, page 582, of Publls Registry Of Duplin County to which map reference is had for a more com plete and accurate description of the above described tract. And being the same lands as described In a deed from T. B. Pierce and C. C. Pieee and Ura B. Pierce, to Joe 'H. Filiyaw (PhiUyaw) dated May 8, 1919 and recorded in Book 207, page 226, of the Duplin Coun ty Registry. , :w : A ten per cent deposit will be required of the successful bidder as evidence of good faith. Advertised this the 2nd day of - , U was m W tt I j . i TLoes office and left for an Indefinite time to rs- ,3 . from an 1U- ' ness. to rest for several vf -SvLi4rf" - PuW-; ... . mrwedrfcnd anJ t-tx linotyper, Al La., v. Paence . t I have tried sorely on occasion, but whose eccuwHe- eyesight Ii have blessed many a time when he has caught an error in typing corrected it7l shaU write Rebel Revelations these next few f : weeks from Charlottesville resting between paragraphs. Of all times to have to leave Kenaasville, this was the worst To night, and thU Is September 5th, there b to bea huge street , dance to which all of Duplin is invited. Next Friday, there will be the annual town picnic et the Kenansville Spring whose water has marvelous properties I've been told. And Friday and Saturday. , night the town will echo with the scraping of fiddles and the strum of banjos and the rhyUunfe stomp of the vigorous dancers at the first Annual Eastern Carolina Folk Festival. A4 least I -k can read about In In the Times, and in letters from my friends ' In Kenansvlls whom I left with such regret. I wss not even able 1 ' to say goodbye to most of them, but I sm sure they will under stand. I envy the contestants who will know all the hospitality of that lovely Southern itown for the first : time 4t is the, most v hospitable and friendly town I have ever known. And for a very , special friend I made in Kenansville, these lines from Browning. , she will know why. - - - ."",., - v ,,... Then, welcome each rebuff k - Tliat ttHiu earth's smoothness rough, Each stlngthat bids nor sit nor stand but go! ' , Be our Joys three parts painl ' ,-" . .. .. strive, and hold cheap the strain; f ' ' Learn nor account the pang; dare, never , grudge the throe! Browning had such faith and courage and buoyant optimism -that there was no room for doubt in his soul. He believed that the , . purpose of living is growth through spiritual evolution. - - v I count life just a stuff - " , ' To try the soul's strength on, educe the man. , ' "Who keeps one end In view makes all things serve I As with the body he who hurls a lanoe , Or heaps up stone on stone, shows strength alike; 1' So must I seize and task all means topsove - ' , , , And show this soul of mine. . 1 , , t , The New York City Council according to.sn editorial in a - recent Satevepost, wants a 'little more glamour for grandma'; And , so they unanimously passed a resolution' to glorify grandmother hood by proclaiming the second Sunday in October as Grand mother's Day. Then the Post goes on to say that the ' average grandmother improved with age. IWe hope so and we hope to, . ourselves jButrwhe tie Auguste-Pcet co and here we quote, On the average grandma wHl be somewhere la J her glamorous seveoties, anyway, end almost certainly retired from ' the tulmults end competititions usually indulged in by us people of lesser years and Infinitely; less wisdom.. We do take issue. ' We know lots of other grandmothers In their early forties, and ' a countless great-grandmothers who are -not yet seventy or Just .seventy. And there is always MsrlesM Dietrich. We do concur ' with the statement that grandma should be distinguished as the ftrsend and ally of youth (hat she has an Instinct and almost -mesmeric conrel ever her grandchlldreo and other peoples child ren .as welL But we do not agree that she has won the battle, of life and withdrawn from It with full honors. There may be a few grandmethene like that, but - we nope to acnieve mat state of bliss and wisdom some thirty years hence when we expect to have been great-grandmothers for many years. Children always wish to put their parents on the shelf as soon as possible J know ruefully, whet Charles Lutwidge Dodsoa (Lewis Carroll) meant when he wrote -Father William.' It was written as a parody on Southey's The Old Man's Comforts, but soon became much more famous than the. original. You are old, Father . William,' the young man said, 'And your hair has become very white, " And yet you incessantly stand on your head , v Do you think, at your ,age, it is right?. '-' "' VY'i'-'Vv , C In my youth,' Father William replied to his son, T feared it might injure the brain; But now that I'm perfectly sure I have none, ' Why I do it again and again.' , . ''':'-;'',, Y- , . r ' --' , , '' "You are old, said the youth, and your jaws are too weak v For anything tougher than suet; . r Yet you finished the goose with the bones and the beak; Py, how did.you manageo do it?'of ' V mv youth'said his father, 'I took to the law, ' , - '. And argued each case with my wife; - y . And the muscular strength which it gave to my jaw Has lasted the rest of my life., ',:'; 1 "' rl Now that we are oh the subject of geriatrics, we read that you have the best chance of having an annual income of a million: dollars or more when you are between 80 and 89. Dr. H. C. Lehman, . Ohio University psychologist, presented statistics to the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association showing that In general, people.who become big shots in politics, diplomacy; . military life, industry and the high courts of the land usually are at least 50 years old. And people of annual earned incomes of $50 000 or more are usually between 60 and 65. Dr. Lehman made a difference between creativity and leadership. He said, 'It eppesrs that the conditions essential for creativity and originality ; come earlier than those social skills which contribute to leadership . i ?d.einlneDCe and which inevitably must wait not upon the Insight Of Hie leader Mmmtlf i.ui.. -a v i. . . ... . , wwsui m. swieiy aoom mm. - When we were very young, and filled with the tragedy, of life and . wo vm vokui m Auseueia s un urowing Old. - 1 But now that we are forty, we are quite sure that these lines may apply when we reach eighty but certainly not before then. ( Be with me Beauty, for the fire is dying, . My. dog and. I are old, too old for roving, . Man, whose young passion sets the spindrift flying Is soon too lame to march, too cold for loving. ' ' I take the book end gather to the fire, ' Turning old yellow leaves; minute by minute, P The clock tides so my heart; a withered wire. . . Moves a thin ghost of music in the spinet - ,,r . ,-.- , , . V i - 1 cannot sail your seas, I cannot wander, . ' '. Your cornlands, nor your hllMand nor your valleys, Ever again, nor share 4h6 battle yonder ' wjiere the young knight the broken squadron rallies. " " Only stay quiet while my mind remembers ' ' J The besuty of fire from the beauty of embers. . " v, V- I - rir' a. v.;'! . 1 ' , -Vf .; Among the other books I, have, reread during my convales- 1. , ceaoe Is Robert Louis Stevenson's Vlrginibus Puerisque (To Girls ' and Boys). His essays have delighted me since I first read them in my teens. And I wish that everyone on his dr her fortieth birthday jwould read Crabbed Age' and Youth.jgtt might hek us to under- ' Stand outplace in the scheme of things beliter and make us a little ' more tolerant, more understanding of ! the so-called vagaries of Youtn. , The Rebel in Rebel Revelations describes What I would " t0,beUeve ia my f mind or soul or both. I have been ai my life a. rebel against smugness and complasency. To mtf "TV... -,;."" f"i"w cJii-BauBiacuon.' n love people Of SU kinds and will figftt" for them whenever ? f eel .that I am worthy , a Issue- But I. loathe stuffed-shirts, I detest, porn- ' posity. Nothing gives me more pleasure than pricking a pin Into ' a super-inflated ego, or smashing a comfortable and set pattern, breaking that shell of , self-satisfaction, 9 That is..one reason 1 . dislike proverbs' and cliches when -"used as' rules for prudent "'" u poo wnere tne' nving- enters.- As Steven- "son ay in his essay, 'Most of our pcket wisdom k conceived for the, use of mediocre people, to discourage from ambitious at, ten.p(s, and generally; console 'them in theil' taedlocrity.' '- Most' . ' sivcu us HjKuiae our uves are , cowardly and lack imagination they discourage thinking and Imagination. They are used too of ten as arguments 'to stop the mouth? of babes and' sucklings.. - , - - .. Why on earth do we try to do that? True, we may not' agree' with the 'opinion, of youth, but at least it is their opinion one thvy have arrived at' themselves. It has seemed to me that it is our duty t teach, these children of purs to think for themselves to listen to them; to keep an open mind on whatever subject they wish to discuss with us. To try to prove them wrong with1 en adage given to us by our grandfathers seems to me stupid., indeed. The world, does change, and condtions change, and we must e willing td chapge ourseJyes. - There are two sides' to every question, Stevenson continues by saying, 'Age may have one 8 ,de.,but we411.youthihas the other. There is nothing more i certain than that both are right, excepf perhaps that both are wrong. Let them agree to differ, for who knows but what sgreein to differ may not be a form of agreement rather than a form of difference? And for my part, I know that an opinion I have tod 1 may not hold tomorrow. When the time come whn I r vt 1 proved wot, tha I VaU a ' :"f '- I n rp-"-' . ' they were our grandmothers. (V J
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Sept. 11, 1952, edition 1
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