Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Jan. 5, 1956, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
1 . i. ,"-, ' Jf." r i ru Prettied .J . nil Ls.zt Ihzti Fc2r as for 1853 should ,'. .rminatlon to let tacts i tar govern your at- t ;)rd the heart diseases. It .! today by the prest M ine North Carolina Heart Aj , ion, Mr. France S. McCon- ! 'u have any doubt about the condition of your heart, consult your doctor," aald Mrs. McConnelL "If he finds that there1 Is- hothiai wrong with your heart and circu lation, neediest anxiety can be eli minated. If disorder is revealed, suitable treatment can be undertak en immediately." ' ' ' As a prelude to the. MM Heart FOIl SAFETY and CLEANLINESS in Curing Your Meat, Bring Your Hogs To The WARSAW LOCKER PLANTt We will butcher the hogs, make the sausage, to your liking and furnish the casing and seasoning render the lard and furnish the stands. ' Cut and wrap the spare ribs or pork chops, cure your sides and slice fcr bacon or give the sides, should ers and hams the regular, plain or sugar salt cure for the small sum of 6c per pound live weight. OR A'A Bring your hogs dressed to the Warsaw Locker Plant and we will make your sausage, furnish the seasoning & casings, cut and wrap your sides," shoulders, pork chops & sp$re ribs, render the lard and furnish the stands for 6c per pound dressed weight. OR ' Bring your meat to the Warsaw Locker Plant and we will cure at 4c per pound for plain salt or 5c per pound for sugar cure. OR If your meat has been cured at home you can bring it to the plant and have it hickory smoked for 3c per pound. For a delicious flavor try our Hickory Smoked Meat ' We strive to please you and to provide better food for less money to you for your consumption. PHONE 439 WARSAW LOCKER PLAMI BILL STREET WARSAW, N. C. ANY TIME IS HOG KILLING TIME AT THE WARSAW LOCKER PLANT Fund campaign, which is to be eon!, ducted throughout North Carolina and the rest of the nation during February, Mrs. McConnell quoted New Year's resolutions proposed by the' American Heart Association,' to which the state1 association, is affil iated, as follows: , , L jo learn the facta about the htart and its ' diseases, and to avoid needless fears and worry. 2. To shun self-diagnosis in favor of, regular heart and health checks by your own physician. 3. To guard against excess weight, remembering that overweight .over works your heart i. To get the sleep and rest you need, because rest lightens the work your heart has to do. 8. To keep fit be exercising mod erately and regularly. But remem ber to act your age' and don't try to prove that you have the physical stamina you had 10 or SO years ago. Strenuous exercise may not harm a healthy heart, 'but the danger Is real if your heart and circulation are not in good -order. & To be alert to the dangers of respiratory infections 1 which are more common during thsy winter months, and may place an added strain on the heart .Prompt medi cal treatment for such infections is important, especially for trep" .throat, which may be the forerun ner ox rneumatic lever ana rneuma tio heart disease in children. Everyone Should Read - - . . . Harper's Magazine, Jan. 1956, Article On Race Question By S. C. Editor ' The real reasons that most South erner are against school desegre gation were laid before the Nation today for the first time by a prom inent Southern newspaper editor in the January issue of Harper's Magazine. ' Thomas R. Waring, editor of the Charleston (S. C.) News and Cour ier, writes the frank expression of Southern sentiment a report which, he charges, the Northern -controlled press has never publish ed before. The Charleston editor accuses na tional news magazines and me tropolitan newspapers of abandon ing "fair and objective reporting of the race story." He says their "one-sided" reports frequently sub stitute propaganda for facts. -Harper's Magazine is the first national periodical to present the Southern viewpoint in full. Its editors said the article ought to be widely read, although it does not express their point of view. Waring, in his article, warns Northern readers at the outset that they may be "infuriated" by it. But, he adds, Southerners also have been "outraged" by the in terpretation the Northern press has given to the desegragation problem. He lists five differences in the Neero and white races which, he says do not encourage white pa rents to permit tneir cniiaren 10 mingle freely with Negro children in school: 1. Health. "The incidence of venereal disease, for instance, is much greater among Negroes than among whites. Fastidious parents do not tavor joint use of school washrooms when they would not permit it at home and there's no use to tell them that it is unlikely that anyone will catch venereal di sease from a toilet seat They just don't want to take risks of any kind with their children." 2. Home Environment. "For most colored children in the South the cultural background is different in many ways from that of their white neighbors and while these differ ences may have various explana tions, they add up in the public's mind as racial. Slavery is so long in the past that nobody thinks a bout it any more, but the master and servant, or boss and laborer, relationship between whites and Negroes is still the rule rather than the exception." 3. Marial habits "On the average one Southern Negro child in five is illegitimate. Many white persons believe that morals among their own race are lax enough as it is without exposing their children to an even more primitive view of sex habits." 4. Crime. "For many years, crime in the South has been more preva lent, among Negroes than among White people. With racial bars and rowdies of both races daring one an other to make something of the vast increase in daily contacts, opportu nities for Interracial ' Strife are frightening. Conservative, law abiding poeple and believe tt or not they constitute the bulk' of Southern whites are deeply fear ful that hatred and bloodshed would increase without separation of the races. 5. Intellectual development. "Sou- 5. Intellectual development . "Southern. Negroes usually are be low the intellectual level of their white counterparts. Some advo cates of integration say the way to cure these differences is to let tha children mingle so that, the Ne groes will learn from the whites. The trouble with this theory is that even if it works, a single generation of white children will bear the brunt of the load. While they are rubbing off white civilization on the colored, Negro culture will also rub onto the whites." Farm Operators Must File Tax Information Farm operators who have paid as much as $100 in cash wages to any farm employee during the year 1955 should file an employer's tax information return for agricultural employees, Mr. C. A. Pope, Senior Agent, Internal Revenue Service, Wilmington, announced today. This tax return will be filed with the District Direc'or of Internal Reve nue, at Greensboro, together witn i the social security taxes on the wages shown on the form. Mr. Pope emphasized that this an nual report of wages paid for agri cultural labor must be filed with the Internal Revenue Service before January 31, 1956. The return must show the name, social seeffrity num ber, and wages paid every employee whose cash wages from the same farmer amounted to $100 or more. Tax return forms are mailed out about January 1 to those who have previously notified the District Di rector of having agricultural em ployees. Farmers, who must make these tax returns and have not yet written for the proper forms, should write the District Director of In ternal Revenue, Greensboro, im mediately in order to be sure of getting the report filed before the January 31 deadline, Mr. Pope urged. Card Of Thanks Thank you for the many kind deeds and thoughts during the ill ness and death of our husband and father. The H. L. Page family It looks high priced .bu.t it's the '56 Chevrolet! CIS VaWf " '" "' , 'J w v vi THE NEW HI All fOT COUfl Who wouldn't mistake this new you lightning acceleration for safer Chevrolet for a high-priced car! passing. Horsepower ranges up to i It looks strictly "upper bracket" 205 ! Att engines now have hydrau- with its bold new .Motdramic styl- lie-hushed valve lifters, w . ; v its longer, lower hood ... Besides, you get safety, door its proud new full-width grille. latches, in all models. You can also But, even beyond the costly ap- have seat belts, with or without pearance of its beautiful Body by . shoulder, harness, and instrument FisherChevy gives the high-priced " panel padding at extra cost cars run for theifmoney.lt brings .tymeMghway-test a Chevroletl '.'tVirf' .11 ? v, ' I A.f f OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCwwww JOCOOOCGOC i lie nine 13 ituif nciu iui riuuuiiua o. The Time s How Here For P antina. r '"'.--. . V . - i. K, - , SSW - S Liu: u u liLz mmj& o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Produce Earlier and Healthier Plants with- o 1 Q o . o o o o 'V . MORE TuWNlZY in the fall - Start your , 1956 Crop Right. ' r-vf 'i 2 I 4-9-3 -PLANT PEMAIL o o o o o o o o o o o o e e o o o o o e o Ov,. O '". o-.". ' o ft' :!- o:i . o . Coker's, Watson's, & Bissett's Tobacco Seed 'Xhix" Seed r o For All Your Crops Use Johnson's Better Fertilizers With Ail - Magnesium Limestone Filler. We Also Have Bed Covers -:- MC-2 Plant Bed Gas -:- Plastic Seed Bed Covers Cotton Co Johns "Cash If You Have It Credit If You Need It" PHONE 202-1 WALLACE, N. C. O. a, o o o- o o o o o ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocooooooaooooooc 'Cfo) TI ' ft THE ' HOT ONES EVEN HOTTER 1 1 k' r'f-y- ' if! ts 111! : IIATAK ' - ; waesaw, n. C 'r-rr; -rr JOHES CHEVROLET CO. Dixie & Robertson Fertilizer 1! :- Anhydrous Ammonia John Deere Tractors & Equipment Silent Flame Tobacco Harvester & Curers - :- Buckeye Tobacco Harvesters .:0 f Complete Shop Service l v Crop Loans -For 1956 Cokers Watson & Speight Seed Complete Insurance Heeds Witi Hatiomvide Ins. Co.r Formerly Farm Bureau Mutual 2 SEE ET1IR0 HILL, VILDUR TYIDALL & VIIITFORD HILL PINK HILL, . :r , " in' f -41. .. IkJ -W ll i 1 1 ' ' . t Phone 2701, , pnni 1 ri'f 1 i ( V .. I V sft i. fir - , V1 u
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 5, 1956, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75