Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / July 1, 1954, edition 1 / Page 4
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if f ; V 1 . K 1 I TC-:ES,' KENANSYnXE. N. C; TUtJRSDAY, JTOL 1. M J.DUP LIN- T I M E8 1 i Thursday Hi Keeansville, N, C, County Seat ,, v DOTLIS COCNTT J ' s" '- ' - - v ' V ; , ' '' Itorta), knJe office and printing plant. Kenawllle.il... V unnw mint inrms . ovnt.1 Entered At Th Post Office, Kenansvllle, N. C : v,- u second elna matter. '-'v'". TXIJ!PBOlinCenini. D SS5- NUM MM 'CPiPTIOIt KATES:. $15 per. year uupnn w. J.M finstow. Pender. Sampson. Nw Hanover ana wayw WttttM ll-N per year entelde this re and M p,wlwber. Ib No Ui Carolina: AdWtlsInf rate furnished on request. A DeM Ftwty Jwormsl. devoted to i rllrlnn. mstrHal. Ja1, Mneinle Nid irrlenltarirl drve1onn.n of noiMi N ATION At EDITOR! At 1 1C5TIN j........ i.B.i.niiig BasB(tAnmb UNIVERSITY SYSTEM NOT ENOUGH t (Editorial from Goldsboro News-Argus) The Consolidated University of North Carolina has an.escheate. fund .which provides scholarships at the , University! at Chapel Hill, at Woman s College in Greensboro and.at State College in Raleigh. Under statute passed by the General Assembly this o"tivaH from unclaimed funds in banks or in- suraiitje Companies. Of course due process of law must - u' tA Aiir nnH everv search possible made for tne . ' person legally entitled to the funds. Only when these conditions are met is the fund given for University scholarships. - . , . , Over the years, a very respectable sum is-derived from the source.We note that during the past year the - Escheats Fund totaled $27,000. ' ! -" With some the question arises: Why should all es--' cheate money go to the Consolidated University? Why ' do not other state-supported colleges share in this fund on'some Jair basis, say a proportion based on the total orn11mpnt of each institution. The Consolidated Univer- sity has through its alumni a great influence in every " phase ol state government. It commands great power - and rightly-sa-.because of its position and its alumni m the General Assembly. -" Aetually-the funds from escheats might be more 00009 sorely needed for Ihe smaller institutions than for the Consolidated University. 'IbeUnIveirity.throuVits various special ; Foundations (such ; as the Business Foundation, the Textile Foundation, the Medica Foun dation) draws to itself great sums of money from public donations for special purposes. Such has , been the acti vity and so early did the Consolidation University enter this field of special funds, that any institution outside the university system finds the going uphill and hard when it seeks to set up special funds to be dirived from the public. The field has been so broadly covered by the Foundations as to present to the other colleges a problem of finding people with money who have not already given to the Foundations. And North Carolina has rela tively few people so prosperous or ,rich that they are able to. make sizeable gifts to several institutions of higher learning. r"-t-- V A 'JA Aside from this factor, there is another, The popu lation of the state is incresaing so rapidly, the number of young people enrolling for college is growing so fast, as to suggest that the state cannot much longer put its greatest emphasis on its university " system." Colleges elsewhere have become of increasing importance in ac commodating the number clamoring for higher educa tion. The state is so extensive in area that to continud to rely in the main for education on institutions located almost in the central part of the state needs to be ex amined more closely. The state is obligated to provide facilities for all its youth who desire a college education. But the percentage of youth gaming that advantage is much larger in areas within 40 to 50 miles of an institu tion. Y .,: Maybe the time will come when the Legislature rewrites the law to allow the other state colleges to share in the escheats fund. Certainly the time is here when the state must rec cognize that its institutions outside of the university system must be broad enough and varied enough in in struction to meet growing needs. Should this fail to be done, the state's youth will suffer and state progress will be slowed. markets during the past year, standing well-up cmong. tie nation's 3,072 counties in business activity. The find ings are; contained in Sales Management's new, copy righted survey of buying power, with statistics for 1953 for all parts of the country. - ? . This survey shows many thing. But the most im portant thing to the local merchants in the fact there is great purchasing power in the cumulation area-'of this paper.-, - . ', " That means that much potential business is avail able in our. section if we take steps to get and attract it What are we griping about ? mm i The IpOOOOOpOOOOOOOOOOOO' Bcrgam ffunfers By itrnrn KIPPING BaZxa XTHEI THRIFTY'S ' 9 4 o m I Thriftys I ? Clinton Warsaw a a e e c 4 e o o e e o o WHAT ARE WE GRIPING ABOUT? How is business? That question put to a majority of business men is usually answered in various ways . . . such as, "It's rot ten" . . . "it stinks" . . . "People aren't buying" . . . "Things don't look good The ground is too dry. Tobacco don't look so good" . . . etc. We have seldom found a merchant who was com pletely satisfied with conditions good or bad. He always has some complaint. It seems to be characteristic of the breed. Ma.'be they like to gripe and find it's a good way for them to let off "steam." Towns within the circulation area of this paper, we know froisi personal experience, have business men who gripe just like they do in every small community. If they'll read the sales data contained in news releases on this county and adjoining counties, it might open their eyes. Wayne and Wilson counties proved to be strong J :;iJ m,rir:jf..ira si IB INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS FARMALL TRACTORS FARM IMPLEMENTS REFRIGERATION -PARTS -SERVICE la MACHINERY COMPANY, INC. kinston.north Carolina PK0NE4U6 Listen to the local news at 12 :00 noon over WGBR. mm in MiwiwimL Be "The Bride Of The Month" . . . Get Lovely Prizes If you are getting married during July, Aug., or Sept. come in and get a lovely gift we will give to every bride who register before her marriage ... in addition you may win the valuable prize we wlH give to some LUCKY BRIDE OF THE MONTH Be Sure To Come In And Register nn mg ruroTTOT tron ok ccrrri mtxrr " tiiniiHaiiwaiaMa o o o o a o o o o o a o o o . o o o o o o o o ' o o o o o o o ( ( ( How Is Your T. V. Working ? Need Repaired? We Have Enlarged & Remodeled Our Repair Shop with all Modern Equipment to Better Serve You. Our 30 Years Experience in the Electronic Field Guarantees You the Best in 'Electronic Repair Service. Drive Right to Our Back Door with Your Set We have Plenty of Parking Space Enter Drive Next to Carolina Theatre Look For Our Sign. If You Are Planning to Buy A New Set We Have the Largest Selection in This Area of R.C.A. Philco Zenith Magnavox and Remember Its the Service After The Sal That Counts. 13d S. C ENTER ST. phone eno O O o .0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o iO o o o o o o Dot Lake, Alaska, June 18. 1994. iy Duplin Timet, Kenansvillev N. C. r Dear Sire The following observations are made after making several very definite studies over r period of about SO yean of research in the field of human relations. Seven teen years of this observation have been made while teaching school- seven years : In boarding school, where I had ample, opportunity to see the tragic panorama of human errors unfolded. ' Soon we . observe a day called FATHER'S DAY. To many of us fathers this will be a misnomer since we feel that so often it is on ly a pretentious express on the part of so many. To others more for. tunate ones it will be a day of genuine pleasure a day when they are not only the recognized bead of their home but a day wBen his children -and his wife pay their honest respect to him. Long decadent and defunct judi cial systems in our land have ig nored the temperament and the place of father In the home. The courts are more responsible for the disruption of our home than any other American agency. They make divorce so easy and place such heavy penalties on the male di vorcee and such correspondingly light penalties upon the female di vorcee that divorce has become a National Nadir. Children are the greatest sufferers in such situations but next to them are the lives of American men disrupted. Too of ten courts place responsibility for divorce entirely upon men. Wom en receive alimony and custody of the children which the father loves and sacrifices so much for. The sacredness of our American home exists in very few areas now. No land can be stronger than its home, No society can be more stable than its borne and no youth can be properly guided out of its normal environment the home. Three- fourths of the divorces stem from the female population. Many worn en iook upon marriage as a pana cea until married and then realiz ing that it is a give and take affair they take they take everything they can and leave. Man has to be more stable for he has to support himself whether he has a wife or not. He wants home children and a normal place in the community, These women who look so lightly upon married responsibilities has in he first place been looking for the wrong thing. They had probably sought added spheres of influence prestige authority, financial security release from necessity of earning a living a refuge from the struggles, of the world or some other tangible or intangible thing. Some actually look for a congenial companion and home life too few seek this goal Many of the un settled ones only want their share they say but they spend their share as they like and then out of his share Father has all the bills to pay. All the time he is spending his life for little. k" We can no more say that a wom an is a mother on account Of being female than we t can say . that a body of water is necessarily a lake or an ocean. There are ' definite traits that a true mother must pos sess just as there are traits of a true father. IX a wife disagrees with her husband she will become criti caland say that she Is persecuted. She delights in criticising her hus band before others and in en couraging others to do the same thing. She . threatens divorce- thus attempting blackmail. Some times she even files for and gets divorce. Many children I have taught were taught by their mother to despise their father but in all my years as a teacher J have yet to meet one child who was taught yy father to look down on mother. Men usually hold motherhood and womanhood sacred until they ex perience one of the faulty ones. Several times I have had grand mother and mothers say of men, Oh, he's only a man he will get over it and he aoesn v iove nis i child too much anyway." These re marks were made as if to Justify a man's loss of his children or child I to-a wife who 1 covetous. Some states do give custody, of children to men as well as to worn-1 en. Some tew states allow men to file' for alimony.' !! In such eases there will be a tendency to prevent the i emotionally unstable woman from lightly breaking . the home contract ; I believe divorce rates would drop in a month to 70 per cent of what it la now. 1 ' Statistics orove that fathers work ceaselessly for their offspring and for their wives. The chief delight of a man is to have tranquility and love in : his home. BeUeve at or I nothalf of our parent! are men! Some women would have ua be lieve-'otherwise. 'rr.,?::-:f: I have seen good men lose their I xtandlna in the community, their I position and capacity as an earner because of the false " crlUcism of their wives. I ; have seen men who started on the road down because of litUe support or encour agement from their wives. Some wives cause men to even lose tar terest in anvthinc. . Our society can well depend up-1 . . . i u i on those Domes wnere uie iuci father Is respected, where te moth er holds him up in ner nuno. ana w her children. Where mother help h onoouraslntf fathers succes's is nevitable. Upon such homes Amer ican society must depend. : ;. Thanks eoodness there are nomes left in our land where aU la tran auillity and where children, par- nta and community meet ana uve happily. On this Father" Day , l wish to especlaUy thank God for mv eood mother and for a -wife who does all she can to make home a place for father and family. . Sincerely, ALSA F. GAVIN. GOT A sur.ir.iER COLD TAKE ((( f for" symptomatic RELIEF 11 CAUSES PDUD , t OcooAirruouf) - , It, I I ' I I' I ,1 . Avrnrv!utRt : ' I . , ..- I W I J41 TUF KtlGU UVWH O I LJi. .. 1 . I II Hri. 1,(1 ui . rrt irTI II . t ! I I. No one really knows what causes Polio. But everyone knows that treatment is long and costly. Assure your loved ones the best possible care if this dread disease strikes. Pro tect your savings your fam ily's future. Farm Bureau Polio Insurance pays expenses up to $9,000 for parents and . children under 18. Gives your family two year Polio protec tion for just $10. Call today for free information. Fred Revelle Phone 600 Warsaw, N. C. , I GAS I WALLACE GAS CO. (ft ? Y y- RMrtAi. Mi mmt stailesially aJ-Z verttsed GAS auteaatla WATES-J J5EATrr.S. Tanfiley Brewn, John Weed. Gw.l V7Iiorf. LAB tZZl 3 UM ALLOWAXCZT ni c.XTi T.ZATn renrdleaa af cond:JoB - ' 1 v See Ui For Your Duiliinz - ; ,;;no2k;;4 r,rv Windowi 1 ' Fine & Oalc Floorbg Doors ' 7 -: j Screens Boofing - Bnck-i Hardware Ply Wood All Other Buildins: Materials V 1400 W. Vernon Ave r' i mf Jt'C i t Phone 2250 Kinston. N- C t-tt: 1 : OMsmoMlo'o ravolutioncnY lilfllMompMaslM OTfltn with billion of miles f proof behind W t?or- p i j,- lewW behind W .J stal end local ' s ' : fwMSSJtlra, - . j ' . ' i. T k "til. ' v ' "' 1 s it v Com In today::; and rocket away! I r ' data to and d1va the " f new K34 "Roekef C:Jmob!I.I I.' today's best bv-b . , , i Your prtca depends upon choice of J model and body style, optional equtp " ment and accessories. Prices may vary : , . r;fJly in'bdioinlng commor.::: be- cause of shipping charges. All price . .. " ' fublect to change without notice. ill yooi oinrrv TODAYI r " I Service' After The Sale Since 1929 . - I- Goldsboro, N. C. - " ) ' ) XCV PAT CNLT - I ( V..Mts, N.C. no r. r J c coocooooooooocoooooooooooooccc j
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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July 1, 1954, edition 1
4
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