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4. 1 J ... .J . L,.t Veek) ). Mi v :,,V; o o . o o 'O vO o o ; o o .0 o o . o .0 o i I y I.oinegay ot Wilson 1 . i of Greenville spent the v c ..cad at home here with their i areata, Mr. and Mrs.: Ervin Kor- l,i c: and Mrs. H. S. TyndaU vis II oil Mrs. Elizabeth Kornegay of Kinston several times last week, Mrs. Kornegay is a patient in a Kin. ston hospital. ' V Mrs.' Nora Hlnson has returned to her home near Goldsboro' after spending some time with her daugh ter, Mrs. Jack Xornegay. ' - Mrs: Frank Kornegay of Farm villa is visiting relatives here. ' ' Mrs. Mary Edwards and baby of, Princeton has been visiting her par ents '.JWr. and Mrs. Ransom Korq. f DRIVE - III Mt Olive, N. C. NOW REOPENED AFTER IIAZEL Shows at 7:00 and tV- 9:00 P.M. 8uxUyOnly Nov. 7 " Phantom Of The Rue Morgue, In WaraerColor starring Claude Karl Manden, Claude Dauphin and Patricia Medina Comedy, Color Cartoon M on.-Tuea, Nov. 8-9 ' The Student Prince In Cinemascope starring Ann Blyth ' and Edmund Pordom Color Cartoon Wed.-Thurs. , , Nov. 10-11 7 Riding Shotgun In WarnerColor starring Wayne "Morris Cartoon and Short FrL-Sat Nov. 13-13 Outlaw Territory m Pathecolor starring MacDonald Carey, Joanne Dm and John Ireland : a . Comedy Color Cartoon I ' ' 1 r Wallace Drive-in Theatre Wallace, N. C. 3un.-Mon.-TuM. Nov. 7-8-9 "GAKDEN OF EVIL" Susan Hayward . Gary Cooper WeeVrhnra, , . Nov. 19-11 "NIGHT PEOPLE" Gregory Peck fend Broderick Crawford FrUSa. Nov. 6-6 DOUBLE FEATURE "MERRY MIRTHQUAKES" Llberace "WAGON MASTER'' Joan Drn Pen-Lin Drive-In Theatre Wallace, N. C. Sat. DOUBLE FEATURE Nov. "PLAYGIRL" with Shelley Winters BULLETS AND SADDLES" Ring Busters Sun.-Mon. Nov. 7 "ORCHESTRA WFVES" Glenn Miller and Orchestra Tues.-Wed. Nov. 9-10 "SECRET OF THE INCAS" Charlton Hfston Thurs.-Fri. Nov. 11-12 "FLAME AND THE FLESH" Lana, Turner 000000000000Q0000000004 o g o- 0 o o 0 0 Sunday and Monday November 7-S RING OF FEAR (Color and Cinemascope with Pat O'Brien and Clyde Beatty Cartoons Tuesday November 9 THE GOLDEN MASK (Technicolor) with Van Heflln and Wanda Hendrix Wednesday DOUBLE FRONTIER GAL with Rod Cameron KILLERS FROM SPACE with Peter Graves Thursday November 11 - CAPTAIN KIDD AND TILE SLAVE GIRL .,-., .. with Eva Gabor and Anthony Dexter , Showing Contlnaoaaly 1ZM to -M P. M. - ' Shows as -M and S:M P. M. ' ! RHAPSODY Jv (Technicolor) with Elisabeth Taylor and Vlttorio Oassnaa rrtday RHAPSODY Saturday DOUBLE FEATURE November IS GORILLA AT LARGE (Teehnleolar) with Ann Bancroft ';. ; SUNSET PASS " '" i with James Warren 1 gay.- - - " ' " Mr. and Mrs. Aubry Sawyer and Mack of Elizabeth City and Mrs. Lottie Lewis and children. Van and Tyndall were among visitors with Mr. and : Mrs. H.? Sf. TyndaU the weekends :',ir's"::: Mr. and Mrs. ' Roland Thomas of Cabin visited relatives here Satur day, afternoon. H5??' : ; f ; Miss Helen Murphy, daughter of Mr.' and Mrs. : Marion Murphy of here, recently graduated from the Grace Downs Air Career School in New York City and is now an air hostess with Eastern Air Lines. Mrs. Settle Walker of Woodland visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred Herring Sunday afternoon, f . , The. Duplin Federation of Home Demonstration Clubs held their an. nual : Achievement Day progran. Friday at the community club house. Several homes of the communi ty were toured and a picnic lunch was enjoyed by those attending. Mr. and Mrs. Earl King of Kin ston visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Herring here last week. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kornegay were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Grov er Jones of Outlaw's Bridge Satur day night. POOOOOOOOOOO MOTOR PARK Drive-In Theatre PINK HILL, N. C. Sunday Nov. 7 Lusty Men Rabert Mitchuni - Susan Hayward Cartoon MoiL-Tues. Nov. 8-9 Martin Luther The man who changed the world forever Cartoon Wednesday Only Nov. 10 .Wake Of The Red Witch John Wayne - Gail Russell Cartoon & Serial Thurs.-Fri. Nov. 11-12 Francis Joins The Wacs Donald O'Connor - Julia Adams Cartoon Saturday Only Nov. 13 Duffy Of San Quention Louis Hayward - Joanne Dru ALSO Lone Star Vigilantes WUd Bill Elliott Cartoon ,O00O0OOO00O ooboooooooo Hula Drive In Theatre CHINQUAPIN N. C. Week of November 7 Sunday and Monday How To Marry A Millionaire Marilyn Monroe - Betty Grable Cartoon and News Tuesday and Wednesday Duffy Of San Quenton Louis Hayward - Joanne Dru Short and Cartoon Thursday and Friday Hell Below Zero Alan Ladd - Joan Letzel Saturday The Lone Gun George Montgomery Serial - Cartoon and "Short OOOOOOOOOOOO O O o o o o o o o o o o WARSAW, NO. FEATURE November 10 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o .0 c o November U Liiilf fid Sche oljl Houses Diseppeor - spin - The big yellow school bus is push, lng the little red schoolhouse of the American landscape at the rate of ten a day, says the National Geogra-' phic Society. . ( School - districts have- been en larged. Modern steel, stone and glass structures, each housing hundreds of pupils and ten or more teachers, are replacing the one-room schools (some still red) where four or more grades studied and recited side by side. ' 77 Educators believe advantages of consolidation outweigh the good points of the "little red" schools. Progress in road building and mot or transportation has made it pos sible to hire more and better trained teachers.' Larger buildings offer better facilities at lower cost per pupil. In the school year 1917-18, 196,000 one-room school represented 71 per cent of all the country's school buildings. By 1940, the number had dropped to 114,000 and by 1952 only 51,800 single-unit buildings were left. This number was cut to 45,000 in 1953. Most of the remaining one-teacher schools offer instruction only up to the sixth grade. Using primitive equipment, they are scattered in rural areas. A few cities still have single-room buildings. The one-room schoolhouse, red, white, or the weathered color of hand hewn logs, molded the early thinking of millions of children. I. was frequently a stern teacher, bu! in later life generations of Ameri cans built nostalgic memories of their youth around the harsh clang of the recess bell or the afternoon 'mmimimimimm STAR THEATRE Beulaville. N. C. Clean Comfortable Relaxing Week ef November 7 Sunday and Monday Duel In The Jungle In color with Zfena Andrews and Jeanne Crain . Tuesday and Wednesday Pinocchio in color Disney Feature ALSO Whistling Hills with Johnny Mack Brown Thursday and Friday Make Haste To Live Dorothy McGulre, Stephen MeNally Serial Saturday Caribou Trail Randolph Scott-Karln Booth DOOOOOOOOOOOI Danca Theatre WALLACE, N. C. Thurs.-Frt. Nov. 4-5 Betrayed starring Clark Gable-Lana Turner Saturday Nov. Fighting Man Of The Plains with Randolph Scott SATURDAY LATE SHOW Strip, Strip, Hooray Burlesque Show "Adults Only" Sunday Nov. Bad For Each Other starring' Charlton Hestoa Mon.-Tues. Nov. 8-9 Passion starring Cornel Wilde and Yvonne DeCarlo Wednesday Nov. 10 Great Sioux Uprising 1 with Jeff Chandler OOOOOOOO&OOf Twilite Drive-In Theatre Beulaville, N. C. Duplin's Most Modem Wednesday, November Wide Curved Screen. drone of reciting pupils or the prank that spelled a halt -hour stay after school. Even the rod, 'often a hick ory switch, became a symbol of nappy, unspoiled days. 's : - Sometimes school, for all Its men tal drudgery, meant respite from bodily toil. In a little backwoods shack at Kndb Creek in his native Hardin County. Abraham Lincoln "learned to read and write, and cip her to the rule of three." r-;,;;,.; f The', late : Henry Ford rescued Redstone school, in Sterling, Mass.. from its ignominious function as a garage and moved it to his "Long fellow's 1 Wayside Inn" .; estate at South Sudbury, Mass. It now serves as classroom for 18 Sudbury j Redstone, where Mary Sawyer's little lamb "followed her. to school one Hay, inspired the poem, '"Mary Had A Little Lamb." Recently, 206-year-old ' Quasset school in Woodstock, Conn., was de dicated, as a permanent shrine. On' the walls of Quasset's single class room are wooden pegs for hanging wraps. Lunch pails and water bucket with tin dipper, sit on a shelf. A high stool and dunce cap, and a slippery elm switch for male-factors have been preserved. Dorchester, Mass, ' probably es tablished the first "free" school in the New World in 1639, and appro priated 20 pounds from public funds for teacher hire. The Pilgrim children earlier had attended class es outdoors or in private homes, with volunteer teachers. FHA Loans Offered Sform-Hit Farmers Horace Isenhower, State Farm ers Home Administration director, announced recently that FHA will offer low-interest emergency loans to farmers hit hard by Hurricane Hazel in 46 North Carolina counties. Counties in this general area in cluded in the emergency loan area are Wayne, Wilson, Duplin, Lenoir, Greene and Sampson. Loans will bear interest at a rate of three per cent and will be made through local county offices of the FHA Tn the emergency area to bon afide farmers who cannot secure help through local facilities. Loans are scheduled for repay ment over the minimum period of time consistent with the borrower's ability to pay. Ordinarily loans se cured by liens on chattel property are scheduled for repayment with in one to five years and loans for re pair or improvement on real estate are scheduled for repayment within one to ten years. However,-amounts advanced for crop production pur poses are repayable when the in come from the sale of the crops pro duced with the loans is received. Loans may be ,'pbtained for the purchase of feed, fceed, fertilizer, replacement of livestock and equip ment, replacement or repair of ings, and for essential farm and home operating expenses. Loans may not be made to pay existing debts, to compensate ap plicants for their losses or to ex pand operations. Heal estate security is always re quired when advances are made pri marily for improvements to real estate. Eligibility of applicants is deter mined by the county committees of the FHA, composed of men familiar with local conditions. Authority for making the loans extends through December 31, 1955. Lacy Coates, acting county sup ervisor for the local office, said, We are really anxious to serve those people where the need ex ists and hope these people will come into the office at the Agri culture Building and have a talk with us." Coates has been taking applica tions since the day of the hurricane in anticipation of participating in an emergency program. Outlaw's Bridge News The first Sunday night services will be held at the Outlaw's Bridge Universalist Church at 7:30 p. m. Rev. Vinton B. Bowering will be the minister. : Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Duncan an- Drive-In Is Opening, 10,' With New Giant . . nounce the birth of a son on Oc tober 26. Mrs. Duncan is the for mer Miss Thelma Tilman. f - Mrs, Clifton Alphln is an opera tive patient in a Kinston hospital "Miss Maggie Stroud of Raleigh visited relatives here Saturday night and Sunday. 1 . "V, 1 ' f t ; Rev, Vinton B. Bowering visited relatives and friends in Canton, N. Y. last week. . " " Mrs. Maria Terry of Kenansvilla spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Sutton. ' . ' Mr. and Mrs., Louis Parker and little son Preston of Mt Olive vis ited relatives here Sunday after noon.' U: .- i Mr. and Mrs. Hall Huntley and children of Waxhaw spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mar. vln Stroud. - Diet Important To Chicks Diet 1s "all-important" to chick ens, Just as it is to people, declared B. 5 Dearstyne, head of the poul try science department at State Col lege. And despite many plump ma trons' feelings to the contrary, the chicken's diet must be watched ev en closer because of Its relatively short life span and the intensity of its body processes. Since the chickens usually get to eat only what the owner places be fore them, they must be fed the right kind of feed at the right time. The diet for all ages of chickens must be 4.0 supply material needed for growth, warmtth, and energy. It must also supply the material to grow and repair body tissues, to produce body fluids, and to lay eggs. About 25 percent of the feed intake of a layer goes into the man ufacture of eggs. Feed requirements of the chick during the first 10 weeks are dif ferent from those of the mature lay. er, and to some extent, to those of the bird on range during the devel oping period. Many Ingredients In checking on a feed tag, the poultryman probably wonders a bout all the various ingredients list ed as being incorporated in a mash. According to Dearstyne, a good mash formula is a product of ex tensive research. Each and every in gredient is placed in the mash for a specific nutritional purpose. Plain old drinking water Is one of the most important ingredients in a chicken's diet, the poultry spe cialist says. If sufficient water Is not taken into the chicken's body, body processes are reduced, dehy dration of tissues occurs, and the bird soon dies. Water dissolves feed particles, carries off waste-materials, helps control body tempera tures, and acts as a lubricant for body movements. n To be good producers birds must have adequate amounts of carbohy drates and fats, proteins, minerals, See THE NEW Phifco AT PATTERSON BROS; Furniture Company "Furniture For Better Living" Mt. Olive, N. C. traSS- No matter how . big or small the repair required on your watch; you can count on the same diligent care from our master v watchmakers. And our prices are just as 'friendly. , . . 1 , f We Repair AU Makes Of Clocks ' ' . All Work Guaranteed . Uc3t Dros. a .. Manly & 104 Lisbon Street and even vitamins, of which 30 are necessary for a balanced diet tot chickens. '1 ' , ' While he structure of poultry nu trition Is complicated, it has been greatly Simplified by the fine ad vances made in feed manufacturing, and poultrymen don't have to tax their brains too! much figuring' out how to have a balanced diet for their chicks. 1 . ' Dearstyne advised that poultry men secure a good mash from a rep utable concern and use according to directions.' He said that nutritional deficiences in chickens should be quite ran if the following; rules are obsrved:;Ji'iV:,i;,v 'V- y;:-':i: L Carefully follow directions, on the' feed tagsr V f v -f ' v 2. Provide adeqata feeding apace. This varies with age of Tird. ", ' 3. Be aura that ample watering space is available and that the wa ter Is clean and containers are kept sanitary. ,f ' 4V Unless a real necessity exists, avoid the : use. ot supplements. A good poultry mash should contain the nutrients necessary for the birds. Heavy consumption ot a sup plement may throw the mash off balance." . 8. Be sure the masn offered the birds is fresh. Stale or rancid mash es 'may throw birds off feed. 6. Avoid use ot tonics or medl- cants unless prescribed by an in formed person. 7. Keep records, of feed consump tion. This should be highly infor mative. ' ' 8. Should a nutritional deficiency develop, take birds to a poultry dis ease diagnostic laboratory where facilities exist to make a proper test. Farm Census Gets Underway In Wayne A force of enumerators started October 29 to canvass every farm in Wayne County as a part of a na tionwide farm census, according to Field Supervisor William L. Cul breth of Fayetteville. The enumerators are the "infan try men" of the Census organiza tion. It is the duty of an enumera tor to locate every farm within the area assigned to him, interview each farm operator and obtain an ac curate record ot all farming oper ations as well as Information cover. lng farm facilities and equipment and related items. Culbreth emphasized that all in formation about individuals and their farm operations furnished to the enumerator; is held in abso lute confidence under Federal law. It is used only to provide summary figures' such as totals, averages, and percentages. The Information on an. individual report cannot be fur nished to any one other than sworn census employees and thus cannot be used for investigation, taxation or regulation. . The 1954 Census of Agriculture is UPRIGHT Freezers Stacy West ' . , ; ' . Clinton, N. C. ) Xiin L Hgfhsi9M4M4lBee"v-Maie''fct ML JTIXSOK KING The top ten tunes ef the week as selected from your: cards and letters, !'.,'"'.'' '-'f ' 1 CemplM by v , NELSON KING cad MARTY ROBERTS " m ya, friends ami neighbors;, here come your old paJa, Nelson and Marty, from the WCKT HIT PARADE, COUNTRY v STYLE, with some news about your favor- It singing and playing stars, and of eourse your "top ten", tunes as chosen through your card and let ter requests first off . i . belated but sincere congratulations to GEO. D. HAT, The Solemn Old Judge of WSM, and founder of Grand Ole Opery 89 years ago. GEORGE has assumed the editor, ship and management of "PICK1N SINGIN : NEWS" that fine . weekly paper devoted to Country mualo. And our Congrats, too to CHARLIE and BILL NEESE, and staff on the fine job they did, start ing from scratch 18 months ago, and. developing a real paper, de voted exclusively to eountry music They built well and strong. The new address of "PICKIN & SING IN NEWS" is HiU . Bldg., 804 Church St, Nashville S, Tenh. . . . MARTHA CARSON,, has a real fan. He's Charlie King of Trenton, Mo.', who operates a 600-acre farm in that area. Recently, he phoned Miss Carson today he was bring ing her a load of eatin material . . . and a few days later showed up after an 800-mile drive with his car loaded with steaks, roasts, chickens, and vegetables for her deep freeze. That's a fan, kids . . . The 3rd Annual National Deejay Festival, sponsored by The Grand Ole Opery will be held In Nash ville, Nov. 19 and 20, with around 800 country and western deejays, expected to attend the two-day affair. On the 18th the annual meeting of the Country Music Dee jay Association will bheld, with yours truly, Nelson, presiding as president. the 16th in a series of nationwide farm enumerations,' the first of which was conducted in 1840. The Census of Agriculture is taken at five-year intervals to provide up to date information about more than 5,000,000 farms which supply food and raw materials used by the peo ple of the United States, now num bering about 162.5 million. The current census, Culbreth ex Wwdi jj After small down payment ' .-, III Completely tiers Fully Autonffici Packed with High-Priced requires " Priced with the Lewcn Exclusive Live-Water Washing Action 1 J . Is safe, thorough, gentle Float-over Rinsing i clean and bright j- Rapidry Spin gets clothes drier Select-O-Dial for fully flexible wcshlng ( U$e$ LESS water than most other makes j Saves hot water, suds for re-use Porcelain (lus t Protection j j vicro it taunts msztL pace iio::e afpliaih ' We Service What We Sell illv fjT XABTY KOBEBTS. :0 In the May 1 Issue of this col umn, HANK SNOW'S "I Don't Hurt Anymore" first showed up, In 8th place. .Ton shoved It Into 1st i plac S weeks later and It's been there 'Oyer since U straight . weeks on top. Here's how you asked us to play them this week. , t L I Dont Hurt Any More (1)- . Hank Smew t. One By One (I) . v ' K. Wells -B. Foley ) S. More and More (S) ; . - Webb rieroe 4. This Is The Thanks I CM (8) ' - , Eddy Arnold B. This Ole House (5) - . Stuart Rambles ?. . Even Tho () " Webb riaree ' 1. If Too Dont, Someone ' ' Else Will (1) . Jimmy Johnny I 8. Whatcha Gobi To Do Now 8f , i' ' -, . ( T. Collins ! 9. Looking Back To See (8) , J.Tubb-O. HUI 10. Courtln In The Rain (10) T. T. Tyler t. BUInoard Hagaslne swivels the npotllght on a popular young man, this week ... FAKON YOUNG with "If That's The Fashion" backed with "If Ton Alnt Lovln." And that just about winds us up for this time. Keep singing, and until next week in this same paper, and - every night, on the 'WCKT JAMBOREE and HIT PARADE, COUNTRY STYLE, where we like to gather 'round with all the friends and neighbors , . . . So long. Hel&Mt and plained, will yield information on the number and size of farms, acre age and harvest of crops, livestock, production and inventories, select ed farm facilities and. equipment and selected farm expenditures. , The reason some men are mis understood , is that they possesa nothing worth studying. IT i gets clothes muII f . . v '; , , J i 00000000000000090000000
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 4, 1954, edition 1
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