Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Aug. 12, 1954, edition 1 / Page 14
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rial" I . I!, C, Cauiitji f af .--1, tit. "aesa orrico and priuuf vai, Kenaasvllle.lv. C J. E02ERT GRADY. EDITOR OWNER i Entered At The Post Office. Kenanartlie, N. C ; m second elaaa matter. . ' ' ", ;.' ' -, . i A 3M s "' TELEPHONE Kenansvflle. Dajr t5B- Nlrht J15-1 ' EtTTGCEIPTION KATES: S3.M per year ta Dnplla. Lenoir, Xsnea, Onslow, Pender. Sampeoa, New Baaever and Wayne ewnitiea: 4J per year outside this area hi North Carotin; and $S.H per year elsewhere, , K, VJt. ' f '! Advertisins; rates furnished on reauett.. A DopUa Connty Journal, devoted to tke relurlooa. material educational oeoaomle sad asrlraltnra! derelanment af DwrHa Cents-. ,',,, , . , , . - N ATION Al t UlTOHIAl EmUNTAnVB, MC "iV . GOOD FOR OUR SIDE! . " Good for our side. We have evidently re-leraned that there are, times when powder and shot serve the , national advantage better than polite diplomatic notes, p, Two red planes tried to get rough with our Navy men flying rescue mission patrols, and our pilots downed the red planes. And to top it, our State Department says it will protest the inhuman interference with res cuejnissibns. J,, Well, now, that is quite a change. We have been wearing the velvet glove of diplom acy so long that many thought we had forgotten the iron striking strength it covered, Before, when fired on, we have "protested." We have ransomed Air Force men in a manner that recalled the days of the Barbary Pirates, and we have been in sulted and degraded in our own eyes. ' . But this time, while our men were on a humane mission, we elected not to turn the other cheek. We slapped back, and it will probably do us a lot more good. ; ' Our people are convinced that you can't play nice, parlor games with the Reds. They don't know any rules, and respect no diplomacy except the diplomacy of force. - Perhaps if we made it positive policy to play rough every time they do, we would have fewer incidents to contend ith. AIDING AND ABETTING It seems to us that no decent - minded person can read of rape and murder, as so recently happened in Texas and Miami, without a shudder and a question of ' why jthese things occur in a civilized world? ! The asswer can be found almost everywhere These heinous crimes are largely innocently aided and abetted by females who (although otherwise respect able) expose two-thirds of their anatomy in pursuit of a fashion that should be outlawed for general wear. " Bare backs, see-more fronts, short shorts that are all too revealing for common decency are seen on all streets, cars and buses. The male populace, not entirely blind and not av erse to a "free show," has its look and forgets it until the next one comes along. But, alasj, There are among us the pervert and the sexual maniac who need little fanning to set ablaze their smoldering disease. After a day of viewing fe male flesh exposed so flagrantly, these abnormal men are on the hunt. And somewhere, someone falls victim to their psychopathic mechinations. Glaring female flesh bared to leering eyes is a menace to all womanhood. Let us eradicate it from streets, cars, and public conveyances. Decolletage and beach wear have their places. Let us keep them in their places. TO ALLAY THE WORST FEAR When the widelv respected Governor of South Carolina, James F. Byrnes, told a correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor he opposes ending racial segregation in the public schools chiefly because it "will lead to mongrelization" he was voicing the great under- ooooooooooooooooooooooo e o o o Q John H. Carter Company OFFICE SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT. Phone 3133 Kinston, N. C. Q C O o e OQOOOOOOOO0OOOGOOOOOOOOO4 ooeoooooooeoeeo WW JWrttlNG TP f Ski c lying fear that besets many of the white people 'of the That fear needs a bit of spelling but to bring it into the. focus of the segregation issue, "Amalgamation" (a more objective term : than' that used by Governor Barnes) gqps jon whereVer races live in contact.' The speed of the process depends less on the fact of contact than on the traditions and mores of the respective croups and on the amount of racial pride and self-conscious-1 ness possessed by each. -" J . - s A ' What Governor Byrnes and his fellow deep South erners fear is that placing white and Negro young peo ple in the same schools will accelerate amalgamation by making social relationships between them so matter of course that interracial marriages1 might become ac ceptable. V''f y:'':;vv ':..p:,k-M ':. !"4' It is always' good sense and good strategy in solving a problem to ameliorate its most 'acute phases first And a thoughtful Southern woman has made a suggest- ; ata 65 m pi? cu?r . x . - v j - i V . v . . m i : nniAT urtB Tut . ion w mis newspaper wmcn we xnins wormy oi snaring witn ptner gooa people oi tne aoutn wno are raced witn a condition, not a theory: "Integrate" the races in the public grade schools and colleges. But at the high- school level "segregate" the sexes. Pla"ce girls, white and Negro, in separate high schools from boys, white and Negro. ' Such an expedient, of course, promises no complete solution. And there is a strong case for co-education under most circumstances. But it might allay some what the worst of white fears. And it should be ac ceptable to much of Negro leadership, too. For Negro leaders, generally, teach pride of race also. They are no more eager to accelerate amalagmation than are their white brothers. They ask simply that the individ ual be not shackled by an inferiority imposed upon a whole race. Christian Science Monitor. f Z Che most celebrated sons akxtt homf- "HOME SWEET NOME" MMS COMPOSED BY A MAN ' ' WHO NEVER ACTUALLY HAD A HOME - . ' JOHM HOWARD PAYNE WAS A PENNILESS , - WANDERER WHO COMPOSED HIS IMMORTAL, SON0 WHILE MAMU5 , SS'oUK HOME Jr YOOH FUTURE - - CAN BE INSURED BY REGULAR PURCHASES S of w.s. savings bonds - voun . V v v BEST INSURANCC FOR MCUMTVS 1: V Here there a will there's a way , and eventually a lawsuit Psychiatrists' say worry Is deadly y another thing to worry about 1 every necessity for the home nqw H;i J adays except the xarally.. J , , : sunshine had to- be paid, for many people would swear that artiU flcial light could beat it . MOTORIST MOM MS pursuing motorocle officers siren . , until the 'ocl 1 IS EVEN with HIS REAR BTMPEK EVEN IF THE DRIVER HAS HIS WINDOW OPEN lPhE LONGEST HOME RUN ON RECORD WAS HIT BY BABE RUTH IN AN EXHIBITION 6AME BETWEEN THE RED SOX AND THE GIANTS. THE BALL COVERED 587 FEET U& SAVINGS BONDS ARE UTTtK THAN CVCHf 7S INVESTED TOOAY SHOWS TO $WO IN LESS THAN 10 YEARS.' p&r3 4 FREE INSPECTION AND ESTIMATES FOE ' " TERMITES 1 . EAST COAST PEST CONTROL :r, PHONE B608 IfcOSE BOX, N.' C. ' . t Rebel Revelations 9 Si". f A T . AIM) July has gone at last and a good' riddance it is, too. If it seemed impossible that there could be worse weather than we had in May and June, we found out there could be. Only ten days of the thirty-one in July were without rain. No wonder the vacationeers have been leaving vacationland and in droves this year, cutting short their stay. The coast has been even worse than the interior. The fog has lain thick and unrelenting over the bays and inlets. Yachts have been fog-bound for weeks. Everything is just dripping and generally dismal. Even at lovely Bar Harbor there were several days this past week when you could not see the water at all the fog was just too thick. At least the summer theatres have been doing a standing room only business. There is not much else to do except go to the theatre. Thtre are several old ones, ones which have become a tradition in Maine. And new theatres spring up each year. The little town of Monmouth has an entire season of the American Savoyards all Gilbert and Sullivan. The cast is small but excellent, the theatre is Victorian enough to seem built for the purpose. And to get seats you must make reservations weeks in advance. There are theatres from Kennebunk to Rangeley and from Camden to Ogunduit. Probably the best known is the Lakewood Theatre near Skowhegan. It is really a colony beside a beautiful lake with a hotel and cottages and a dining room that serves superb dinners. Many well known actors appear there each season and the regular stock company is more than adequate. Several times each season there are stellar attractions with a prominent star who appears in the same vehicle ilongi the whole summer circuit and the supporting cast is made up of the regular company. Two weeks ago there was a play that had the largest advance sale of anything ever offered at Lakewood in its more than fifty years or summer stock. I am sure that most people came out of curiosity, 'hoping no doubt to find something to criticize. The play Is a slight but amusing one but the people did not come to see the playt all. The star was the magnet. She drew people from all over Maine. Many of them had never been to a legitimate theatre before. Yes, in this rock-ribbed Republican state, the greatest attraction ever offered was none other than Margaret Truman in Autumn Crocus. She received a tremendous ovation for Maine, too. And she was really charming. Her performance was adequate, her humor was sly and she underplayed the role just enough to make it con vincing. Those who had come to scoff left with praise. I think what surprised most of the would-be critics was her disarming sim plicity, her unaffected manner. She did not put on airs at all. I heard one sharp-visage old gal say. Another was astonished that Harry could have produced such a nice girl, she must take after her mother. Yes, Miss Truman was a smash hit in Maine and added more prestige to the Democratic party than any one has for years. It was more of a feat than it may seem unless you know how Maine people look at Democrats always with suspicion. As that eminent Maine Democrat Paul Douglas has said, to succeed, a Democrat first must get out of Maine. And it's about true at that. There are many other things to do in Maine in the summer, too. You can always find some place to eat usually in such quanti ties that you almost regret it if you must make a hog of yourself. Some of the most delectable sea food in the world is served along the Maine coast. This week end in Rockland there is a feast for those who like lobsters. I have no idea how many of the succulent shell fish will be cooked but tens of thousands certainly. People are not satisfied with one or two, often they eat four or five or even even a half dozen, all dripping with butter. And if you start the meal with steamed clams and clam chowder and lobster stew, and can still hold more. than two broiled-live lobsters, you must have a tremendous capacity. It is considered rank heresy in Maine or, indeed, in New England to confuse that strange conncoction called mistakenly Manhattan clam chowder as clam chowder at all. It resembles far more a vege table soup into which a few clams have strayed by mistake. Old Doc Rockwell, the famous Squire of Southport, has this to say on the subject. "Hi, stranger! Pull up' a nail keg and relax. You made no mistake selecting Maine for your vacation. But don't take liberties. Don't start criticizing our kind of clam chowder made with milk or advocating its overthrow by violence and the addition of tomatoes. The kind of red propaganda is quickly spotted. "Two weeks ago, Sea and Shore Commissioner Stanley Tupper ordered the burning of all cook books that contained chowder re cipes calling for tomatoes." And the people actually feel that strongly about clam chowder. It must be made with fried or dried out pork scraps, fresh onions delicately browned, clams, Maine potatoes and milk, cream and butter no substitutes here please. Substitutes are a convenience and often labor as well as money saving devices but the result is not the same at all. That is one difference between adequate food and fine food. Fine food should ; not be wasted on those who don't appreciate it either. f ' Fine food is a creation, a work of art, a labor of love. There are no short cuts in its production. It requires an imagination, a dedi cation, an understanding. No pre-mixed stuff here, no frozen meal 4 that only needs to be heated. That is all right if you must, or if your, audience lacks the discrimination of a true gourmet. You don't want to waste your creation on someone who doesn't appreciate the delicate subtilties of vichyssoise. If you have such !i cuest to cook for, one of the general to whom caviare has no flavor, why just open a can, or thaw out a meaL it won't matter.? Let them eat cake, the kind that comes ready mixed, can be put in . the '""en In five minutes. v i : tC As much as I hate to admit it, most of the really line cooks V I know are men. Many a man has made a reputation on one dish, ' or even two. Andhe poor gal in the family suffers along day after . day giving the brute adequate nourishment with nary a word of praise. -' .1 don't mean that kind of one specialty chef I mean one who can' and does prepare all the meaL the meals, who does it so well that his 1 wife couldn't compete ana nas no desire to either, smart 'Woman , that she it ' ,i ? J. .These men have a feeling for flavor, a real appreciation of the ; art of cooking. They bake bread, make pies, and cook meat as . it should be cooked, their salads are perfect Many less gifted ' and less understanding men resent these paragons of virue. ey, scoff and say, "Are they real men, aren't they effeminate to do a woman's work?" No, my dear sirs, they are not at all effeminate they are so sure of their masculine virility, bolstered no doubt 'by the excellent food they cook, that they don't have to bother about being considered effeminate. Those men who are afraid of not being called men usually protest too much anyway. And any woman knows at once how male a man is. No, these men who are creative cooks are usually successful at their businesses, too, and they are the most thoughtful and devoted husbands I know. They understand the problems of a homemaker, the hours and hours that go into creating the peace and charm that makes a home. Their wives are appreciated wives, and oh my, how fortunate. Yes, if you are going to pick a husband, find one who can cook, or at least one .who' knows what good cooking is. I find men whom food bores, very boring themselves they have no comprehension of the finer things of life, their uncultivated palate is a clue that all their tastes are uncultivated. Most men who write are excellent cooks, architects are superb. Many musicians and photographers and actors could earn top salaries as chefs. To them cooking is an esthetic experience the development of an art to its highest form. Yes, I like men who ran cook, who show sufficient interest in their homes to take an active part in its management to share in he work of making a home that is a refuge and a strength. To these men a home is a castle and they are the undisputed kings thereof. HELEN CALDWELL CUSHMAN IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC f " I : i -Wilmington Coca Cola Bottling Company Wilt, ington, N. C. KED ASH r, EHIQUET COAL FUEL OIL ana' KEROSENE R. 6. VARREII i i Phone tatl ' Mt. Olive, N. C 0 'OOOGOOOOOOOI For "Sale t SASH, DOORS, SHEET- v : ROCK WOOL, PLAST- ER, LIME,? CEMENT, . BRICK, MORTAR . TAINTS, TERRA-COT- ' TA PIPE, DRAIN TILE, WHITE ASBESTOS SI DING. ASPHALT ; SHINGLES, ALL KIND , ROLL ROOFING, 5-V CRIMP TIN ROOFING, ' And BRICK SIDING ROCK, ROCK LATH, 11 CARTERS SOU , WALLACE. N. C. t - IOOOOOOOOOOOC Venetian Blinds - Alum Fab Screens Awnings Made To Order - Phone 2995 - Installed CLINTON VENETIAN BLIND CO. 606 p. R. Draughon St Clinton, N. C. METT B. AUSLEY D: D. 5. 0 Announces the Opening of His Office O For the Practice of O GENERAL DENTISTRY 4V Located in Dr. Matthews office 0000000000000000000000004 o o Phone 640 X DR. THOMAS W. ALLEY Optometrist Of Wilmington, N. C. Announces The Opening Of His Office ForvThe Practice Of Optometry " In Warsaw, N. C. On Tuesdays & Saturdays From 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Second Floor Warsaw Drug Co. Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted cecil a. miller General Insurance Beulaville, N. C. Office At ' Brown & Miller Co. ioqoooooooooooooooooooooo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o or o o Bargain Hunters By" 1HRIFTYSX . Yes Wallace Stock Yard . , . Auction Every Thursday 1 Buying and Selling Daily -Telephone 3161 - 6171 Wallace, N. C. Listen for top hog prices each day over Clinton Broadcasting Station about 12:15 and Wallace Station at 12:25. .yattitci- ARE EARNING LOTS OF $ , FOR THOUSANDS OF GROWERS BECAUSE n CURE-ALLS B if S USE LESS OIL djj: kH, fcrJ .tjjj ,ffl I I ll . ! f m ' ti if VTiw KJi THDIFTV'C 2 T J 11 r " I I 111 II I ; I t W - fU' t S f , Q O Clinton Z , , ,, s j , V. -.. Warsaw g 1 NO OIL VAPORS OR SMOKE ARE RELEASED IN THE DARN TO SMUDGE YOUR TOBACCO. NO TAGS ARE TURNED ON TOBACCO CURED WITH A CURE-ALL Cure-Ail axceDs because of h giant heavy duty heaters with the 30 di ameter outer circulator and aluminum plated tteel heat chamber.. Its pat ented Twin Blast Burner h)ao clean burning, you'll seldom sea smoke. So efficient in heat savina. the imok pipes run cool, needs no screening, W You clean it by a twist of the wrist after each cure. Built like a high priced furnace with exclusive giant heat savina jtir nrrt.tj.tin. am4ai Hpi.m No wicks to trim or replace. Heaters built over modern equipment with securely locked edges, bound to give maximum service. 1 ... " ' j ONLY CURE-ALL HAS A SINGLE CONTROL ASSEMBLY: DESIGNED ESPECIALLY FOR A TOBACCO COOKER. Don't be satisfied with make-shift controls that were built for some entirely f ' different heating job. The single CURE-ALL vake operating all four stoves.; . assures you more dependable performance and a much simpler hook-up. i f 5CPARATE DRUlifC B.T.- r 1 1 2 - -nSM . ""okt pp " 5171 e- Ttia man wka uu CURF-Af IS tJt wi M.aM-. n .ut I a. i.Jit . -r- wi m fw inifllaTB '- i and tarn you a better price for your Lai Mr. It . McLamb, Benton, V, North Carolina writes: i " ,X ' f "I bought my first tat of CUR! AU1 14 In Vm havn't avail , ' " . '. ."r bought replacement part for 0t4ers and tfiey are ; perfect condition today! .They af . l M oil and to simple i' -, school child can operate thorn. r Si frad th'u tat I have ' ' used for 14 yean for and otlrSf r jSr i 1 J.A,TUr.;:ERCO;-J OpOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOpOOOpptl ; Pinkllill.N.C. Phone234a . M'.v ' ' i " ' - " -"' )', " .... . . . , r . N. . .... .. If. , V-' "Hj, V
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 12, 1954, edition 1
14
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