Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Oct. 23, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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k. " Fr Uncle Sam THE INS AN0 TUK OUTS There are but two great political parties In the United State. The first is ta party of the ins. The second is the party the outs. The ins and the outs ate always The outs are working to. get In. No matter whether the In are out or the out are In. It is always the ins that do the stealing and the outs that do the squealing. When the ins stay In, it "is an other term la. But when the ins . donot stay in, It is another turn ' out. ;. -: . :... 'When the Ins 'strike out. the outs run in. a , . . it a i . o nji .. l t. i e ins do co, tu ouj always say tney ought not to do. - The ins an dthe outs are always busy, staying in, getting out or get ting in. - f . ;( Whether the :i ins Watch tut or not, the outs are always watching toe ins. The outs are, usually none the wiser by getting, in. The ins are always the losers be fore they get out. The ins have the ammunition but the outs have the guns. : ' The ins must work, grin and bear, for the outs are always work ing to take and share. The ins may never want to get out, but the outs are always want ing to get in. The outs get in. by the voters voting against the ins, for the vot- PORTABLE TYPEWRITER UNDERWOOD ROYAL REMINGTON SMITH-CORONA EASY PAYMENT $7.50 per Month TAFF-C00KE, INC. COMPLETE OFFICE SUPPLY SERVICE 139 N. Center St. Tele. 803 GOLDSBOKO, N. C. O o o o o o o o o a o o o o o o o o o o o o . o o o o o o o o Pontiac and CMC. SALES and SERVICE GOOD CLEAN USED CARS U. S. ROYAL TIRES BODY REBUILDING COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE 24 HOUR WRECKING SERVICE Phone 2005 ELLIS MOTOR SALES, INC. Mt; Olive, N. C. ' if ' :"" O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o . A o o o e o o o o o o o o THE DUPLIN TIMES PufcUshed each Thursday In Kenansville, N. C, County Seat of DUPLIN COUNTY Editorial, business office and printing plant, Kenansville, N. C J. ROBERT GRADY, EDITOR OWNER Entered At The Post Office,. Kenansville, N. C as second class matter. TELEPHONE Kenansville, Day 255-6 Night 215-1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 13.50 per year In Duplin, Lenoir, Jones, Onslow, Pender. Sampson, New Hanover and Wayne eowtttes; I4J0 per year outside this area In North Carolina; and $5.t per year elsewhere. ' ' Advertising; rate furnished on request A, Dnplin County Journal, devoted to the rellgkms, material, edooaUenal, economic and aimultural development of Dnplin COIinty. -:y. NATIONAL EDITORIAL AS0C5T(2N Urp Ferrers To I!:!J Cc.;;:i U.:.. kl:i are recorded, will lose up to S20 a bale,' Mann said. Therefore, we Raleigh Declining cotton pric es caused M. G. Mann of Raleigh to issue a strong appeal to grow ers this week, urging them to hold every bale until the market shows greater strength. Mann, who is general manager of the N. C. Cotton Growers As sociation, - pointed out that prices began slipping last week after the government revised upward its September estimate of the 1952 crop by more than 500,000 bales. Reaction to, the announcement was immediate, : and the market : has continued weak smce.-..;:'- The October 8 estlmat eplaced the crop at 14,413,000 bales or 524, 000 more than the September esti mate of 13,880,000 bales, v. 'We believe that: farmers who rush their , cotton to market now, hoping to sell before furth r drops ers always vote a; Inst the in when they change but never for the outs. The ins are sire to have just as many ous as they have ins. 'It is easy for thj outs to stay out, but it is always hard for the ins to slay in. The outs may never get In, but the ins will 5." -ays get out. After all, the:c will always be only twi nartiss. The Ins and the cuts and the ouls and the Ins. . are strongly urging all cotton gro wers to think twice' before they se 1. The cooperative official pointed out thhat plenty of bonded ware house space is available' for stor ing cotton and that ample machin ery exists for obtaining a price sup port loan through banks, the gov ernment, or other agencies, sueh as the Cotton Growers Association, By obtaining a loan on his cot ton through approved channels, Mann said, the farmer retains con trol and may sell it at any time during the period of the loan. This J means ne can take advantage of a rising 'market which most agricul tural leaders expect after the rush of 'the fall marketing season. Mann declared that farmers in the past have been able to influx ence cotton prices by withholding their lint from the market until more orderly selling can become established. This he is now urg ing ail farmers to do, Robert F. Smith A3c RobeH F. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edd Smith of Pink Hill, N. C. is presently training as an Air Force Technician at the USAF 9 o 9 9 ) it o o o o o 9 9 O 9 o When BUILDING, REMODELING, or REPAIR ING SEE US FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ROUGH and DRESSED -All Kinds Moulding and Trim - TELEPHONE 2542 For Free Delivery Prompt Service Calypso Veneer Co. MEMBER SOUTHERN PINE INSPECTION BUREAU o o o o 9 9 1 O O O O O o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o 3 On Savings i . EACH ACCOUNT INSURED UP TO $10,000 Money Available For Withdrawal On Demand At Any Time. MUTUAL BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION 114 E. Gordon St. Kinston SHOP III- GOLD V7) EASTERN CAROLINA'S SHOPPING CENTER THE FOLLOWING MERCHANTS INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEM WHILE IN TOWN: IIEIL JOSEPH EXCLUSIVE LADIES EEADY-TO-WEAR CREECH'S l!!C. FURNITURE OF - DISTINCTION BERMY'S LOAN CO. NEED MONEY? SEE BEENEYv t CIIHIEY MOTOR CO. Your Friendly Nash Dealer : In 5 Counties HELIG-liEYERS CO. COMPLETE ' HOME FURNISIHNGS N. C's OLDEST JEWELERS Goldsboro t Oldest Business r CO., INC. a FUSNITUT. Ciore of T-""t T-m Vure Talaea Frlsiiire A', janeat . ro:i;3so:idgstoe ON TID3 CORNER J PEESCR1TTION SPECIALIST CELL-STU:.?J '- -- ' - ; '''' ' ' ' FURNITUKE CO. The Store 01 Friendly Credit 3 L"j rcrrlire Ei-re On Center St r :::;::::.! " -J ' v'i v . ..; ' ' ,'"- ' ' ' 1 ' ' " . omutoAi ' .J- WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Playwright Here's the Answer HORIZONTAL 1,7 Pictured' , playwright 13 Gazed fixedly 14 Malay island 1 19 Stupor ' -16 Preposition IB Unbleached 20 Mimic 21 Quiets 23 Secreted 24 Mixed type 25 Mount (ab.l 26 Higher 28 Down 29 Consumer 31 Tree ,; 33 Stir 34 Dove's call SHeisa Prize winner 37 Come in 40 Area measure 41 South v latitude (ab.) 42 Steamship - (ab.) 43 Chinese weight 44 Trap 46 Lances 51 Boy 52 Virtuous 54 Reverberate 55 Top of head 56 Girl's name 58 Incinerator , 60Thicker 61 Horses VERTICAL 1 Get free 2 Ideal state 3 Sport i 4 Age 5 Compass point , 6 Redact 7 Greek coin 8 Negative reply 9 Before 10 Length measure 11 Spanish town 12 Noisier 17 Symbol for nickel 18 Thallium (symbol) 21 Saunters 22 He achieved great in his field 25 Ancient . 48 From (prefix) ' Aryans 49 Exclamatioin 27 Mexican serfs 50 Steals 30 Flap 32 Speck 35 Scolded. 36 Bird ' 38,Cheerec. 39 Horsemen 45 Midday 47 Equal 51 Narrow road 53 Underworld god x 55 Before (prefix) 57 Symbol for , selenium ' 59 Note of Guido's agate I 12 13 H S l I 17 18 IS I0 II it j . jj- - - w Ji dsisrirzr-- v a iii, Z1 30 - . j 3 31 , iT ' ' f is 35 13. " V . 51 34 131 47 4 141 150 Wi 51 r- sT--Wl 5fc 57 58 51 S3"TT7 ' " H ? ,, still written from wnat a optinusucaiiy cauea ounny k,hu " fornla' a land of tuch fog and smog that I am sure England would have to take' second place. And in England "the fog however. " thick, is gentle but this , is acrid, eye-smarting , smog and a V too-frexjuent zero visibility. , ' Bll' i ,!''" ' Today for the first time in weeks,, my copy pf the DupUn Times caught up with me.- Honestly I dont know, when I nave been quite so homesick for a place and the people in that ' place and the work I did there. It seems ages ago when I wrote a piece called, 'Kenansville? I'm A Stranger Here Myself. But I know that I shall never be a stranger there again: The place and the Job and the people are deep in my heart now. I know when .the time conies that I return to Kenansville, I. shall feel all the wonder that Ronald Coleman expressed so well when he returned to ShrangrHLa in Lost Horizon-that marvelous know ledge that 1 have come home. To paraphrase Robert Louis Stev enson. ' r ' ; Here I shall be where I longed to be. 4 Home is the sailor, home from the sea, , And the hunter home from the Kill.- , So much goes on. of Interest in this huge, sprawling metro noils that it would be impossible to write all my impressions of - what J see and do. , But there are a few things I am sure that' my friends In Kenansville and Duplin .County- would enjoy see , lng and I shall try to tell about those things. When I was in Kenansville, I attended all of the churches but mostly the, old Grove Presbyterian Church.' I was especially Interested to know about the beautiful home for retired Presbyterian foreign mis sionaries at Westminister Gardens in Duarte. The home and 37 acres were formerly part of the estate of Dr. and Mrs. Wayland Morrison. It has been used by the Presbyterians for about a year ; and a half. There are now 33 residents, but wtth the completion of a $150,000 building program, the capacity will be increased to :: 60., A New York Chinese recently gave a million dollars to the home In appreciation of the education he received in a Presbyterian school in Peiplng. ... ' , ' Included in the coo1., shaded gardens is a bamboo grove wbi:h reminds many of the former , missionaries of their days-in the Orient. A swimming pool, tennis courts and horshoe pits are on the grounds. There sre big barbecue and picnic areas, recreation . rooms and a fine library at the disposal of the residents. -The noon meal is served :n tiie Lining roam, but tha rcidonts ipxepare their own breakfast and evening meal in thir completely furnished ' modern cement block apartments. Each one pays rent for his apartment, and the highest rate is $50.00 for a double apartment. To qualify for residence, the missionaries must be past 65 and have served 20 years overseas. Oldest residenf is Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Cunningham, 93, who spent 43 years in China. Winding paths lead to the sing e story apartments and past a Cape Cod cottage which is a replica of the cottage in which the former owners spent their honeymoon. One row has represen tatives from six foreign counties missionaries living there have served in Korea,' Mexico, Brazil, the PhilUplnes, Japan and China. The couple with the most service is the Reverend and Mrs. Ch;rls Pittman who have combined a total of 79 years in Iran. They met and were married in Iran where he was an evangelist and she was a teacher 46 years ago. They retired in' 1941 and both agreed that the? would spend their lives the same way if they had it to do over again. The home is still too young to have many traditions, v But It ' does have a weekly custom, Tuesday afternoon tea. The super intendent who spent eight years in Slam, Clarence Steele, said the Westminister reidents are Just a trifle annoyed by two signs on Huntington Blvd. both pointing south of Santo Domingo Avenue to the home. One says "Westminister Gardens' and the other, "Parking for antiques' but all of these delightful people saw the humor in it And if ever people had a suitable reward for valuable work well done, these people hav found it in their magnlfieient home.'''' , V .,' , : .v'.'-v ,'-', J This Is part Of a poem by the late Rebecca MdDoel Wyman called Tou Are My World'. I mentioned her lovely, singing verse . last week she was from Chicago and her mother, Mrs. William K. Kenly, had a slim volume of her poems published posthumously ana mus snarea tms oeauty wjtn (Ml Wm Who love poetry. Tost Your Infolligoncq : Score yourself 10 points for each correct answer in the first six questions.., ; ' , ,TIj.'- t ' 7- " " , 1. Which of the following games was originally,, sometimes still is, played on a green? . ' Tennis Tiddly winks --Bowllng Plng-Pong Z. V."ich of the following is the thigh bone? - Digit Cranium Femur Fibula 3. Two states bordering on Canada have territory on peninsulas reachable only by crossing Canadian territory. One of them is named below. Can you and it? ... Maine , . Minnesota . Michigan - Montana 4. Which of the following men led the "Rough Riders" ia Cuba during the Spanish-American War? " --w Stonewall Jackson John J. Pershing r Garcia Theodore Roosevelt ' 5. Pick out the following word which does not match the other three. Mold Fungus Mildew Trichinosis 1 6. Which of the following writers became famous for books which were not written in his native tongue? " Joseph Conrad Honore do Balzac - William Faulkner - Sinclair Lewis 7. Match the following leaders with their respective countries. Score x yourself 10 points for each correct choice. , ( (A) Peron France (B) Tito Argentina . (C) Schuman Germany , VA ww 1 . 1 1 1 - - ; Total your' points. A score of 0-20 Is roor; 30-60, average; 70-80, superior; 90-100, very superior. Answers On Theatre Page iWB'- fr' You have,); in your eyes 4 .'S; '; The whole tranquility Jjff'Vv. 'k t clouded .Jpoi. grey skies, -j- - You have, in your two hands " t The quiet; promised strength Of broad, plowed lands. Technical School at Warren Air Base,- Wyoming, it has been an nounced by the commanding iu- fleer.-1' '":.'; 'i-','.:t;,-'"' X . , ,;,, ,;' At this historic former cavalry post outside Cheyenne, the Air Force is training young airmen in the many specialties needed for air power. Besides clerical skills such as clerk typist,' clerk stenographer and administrative specialist, the schools at Warren Air Force Base train automobile mechanics, pow erman, electricians teletype oper ators and repairmen. For re-roofi:;&-re-sid:;:g METAL WEATIIEU STRIPPING Home fauralattoa roof oMttngs fo yew eld reof. We hare ' . expert mechanic to stake tnatallationa aeeordlna; to auuia y facturert speclflcatioiia, 1 , . ' . We re-reof erer weed shingles. ., , Call as for large or small Jobs UiCv..LM.i. uL......J LUa Phones 2868-2081 CUntoa. N. C. THE N A I.I E HIIOLEY in your" garment means yon will be comnleely sei;...jed satisfied with; faorio, color workmanship, r-ad aboye all mm I and wear. SUITS and OVErXOATS 17 a ri slaci:: r - frc: v r o o o o o o C) o o () ( 4 ( 11 VlO'Zd 1 w Ton . . , And in your heart for me ' Beats the ceaseless pulse '' : Of the unchanging sea. ; ,:';' , "V.! Tills week, AdlaJ Stevenson,' who was born here, came back to Los Angeles., He made three speeches, two of them broadcast on a national hook-up. His reception was a huge, swelling ovation and many of the best known pepole in show business were at ' the Shrine Auditorium to pay him homage and to entertain the capacity crowd who had gathered to hear him. Among others : who . will entertain at a mammoth rally by the Stevenson-Spark-man committee in the Palladium at 8 p.m. on October 27 are f Dlna Shore, Paul Douglas, Richard Widmark, Dana Andrews, 1 Ethel Banrymore, Marlepe Dietrich, Groucho Marx, Lauren BacalL -Will Rogers, Jr. and Humphrey Bogart. r - ' , , ' And last night that shining personality of the stage and screes was here to welcome the man she is going to vote for 1 none other than TalluUh Bankhead. Someewhere I read that the smart money is watching Tallulab she not only wdrked for but believed in Harry Truman's victory in 1948 as she did last year for her beloved Giants and this year as on those other two occasions she has gone on the wagon until her candidate is elect ed. .Wh-knows? She was right on the other two occasions. - - - ;"""-f - -'). ,. -, . . t u To my friend and co-columnist and also one of my falthfui readers, John Bragaw, I wish to tell him that I almost celebrated the day set aside for .Grandmothers the Second Sunday in October by becoming a grandmother for, the second time. Ac- -; tually it was on October fifth and this time it was a granddaughter whose name is Caroline Virginia Caldwell. I have come to know her rather well during the occasionally long nights when I ' take care of her and which she seems determined to turn into' ' day. Oh, I am quite aware of those lines of Ogden Nash ' called Pediatric Reflection. , Many an infant screams like a calliope . Could be soothed by a little attention to its diope. . . - . I have always enjoyed his book -Parents Keep Out'-elderly, poems for youngerly readers and I have been re-reading it be tween Gesell and Dr. Benjamin Spock's Baby and Child Care . -Among the blessings 0 being a grandmother is that of being able ' v ' to be relaxed about the Whole ; thlng-nd to be amused" by the nuschievousnesa of children. I think it is a gross canard that we " try to shelter tbem too much. I thought la the we, small hours 4 ' of this morning of. all those fairy godmothers who came to Ibe r cradle of the Sleeping Beauty and wished her all good things no pain, no sorrow,' no disappointment. And I knew if I were a fairy godmother I should be much wiser than that and hope that my granddaughter know aU of life, ks pain as weU as its Joy and learn to grow thereby. No, I would not have her wrap-' ped ia cotton wool so that she never was hurt but I would wish for her courage to, accept whatever life has to offer, and a keea '. sense of humor to take the trials 'and laugh at themand of aU the good things I would wish for her, I hope .more than anything , thot she learn to be kind. Courage, gaiety, kindness and a lively curiosity what child could need more to epjoy. life? And I hope to teach all my grandchildren all the poetry that I know by heart x and the lighter verse of people like Dorothy Parker and Ogden ' Nash of which these by Mr. Nash I am already teaching Caroline ' How many scientists have written The shark is gentle as a kitten? - ' - xet this I know about the shark; 'v " ' .His bite is worser than his bark. " . ''r ..' '', ' &Mmi exuamuL, cushman lit : 7n, C:ro In jlita .I'lv..-nrajlvl3 .IfSARIINIfJRlVr fiEHMANiVJMIW'! William OoM nf Mount OIIim N C, recent. y participated in a large scale NATO field maneuver in sou thern Germany. He has now 're turned f his station at Gabllngen. p. ore tnan bu.usiu American and different countries in the North Atlantl Treaty Organization Army. 5ore, ah operations specialist in the 108th Regiment of the 28th :' Infantry Division, entered the ' Army In 1948 and arrived in Eu- rope this May. s - 1 t j ' Kit R. Huntert seaman; USN, V . Ann nf Mr: an1 Mn Wtratf TP it.i . ter Of Route 1, Chinquapin, N. C; ". a serving i -oara. tne aestroyer tender I M tml, j in t e
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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Oct. 23, 1952, edition 1
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